Estimating the size of the pre-colonial Indigenous population in Australia and the aftermath of European invasion
(includes code to compare predictions to anthropological/historical accounts, and a demographic model to estimate the number of excess deaths occurring from pre-colonial period to the late 19th Century)
Williams, AN, R Tobler, B Griffiths, S Ulm, MC Nitschke, MI Bird, S Ingrey, F Saltré, K Beller, IJ McNiven, N Pitt, L Russell, C Wilson, CJA Bradshaw. Large size of the Australian Indigenous population prior to its massive decline following European invasion. In review
Estimating the size of Indigenous (Aboriginal) populations in Australia prior to the impact of European colonial invasion is essential to truth-telling and reconciliation, as well as providing a baseline from which to anchor contemporary socio-economic and environmental management. Robust estimates of the population dynamics of pre-colonial Indigenous Australians are poor due to the early exposure to lethal diseases, extensive frontier violence, and a lack of any systematic censuses. Here we review ethnographic observations, archaeological and genetic reconstructions, and modelled carrying capacity using climate hindcasts, to infer Indigenous population size prior to colonial invasion. This allows us to estimate the number of excess deaths in post-colonial times. Congruency of the modelled (not reconstructions based on historical accounts) population size estimates suggests a bootstrapped median of 2.51 million people in the pre-colonial population (75% confidence interval: 1.13–4.41 million), or 0.33 people km-2 (75% confidence interval: 0.15–0.57 km-2). For a median pre-colonial population of 2.51 million, approximately 32,500 excess deaths year-1 (2.39 million deaths in total) would have had to occur over the late 18th and early 19th Centuries from colonial invasion-related mortality to arrive at the estimated population of 0.177–0.193 million by 1861 (i.e., to 7–8% of the median pre-colonial population). These findings highlight the major impacts of invasion experienced by Indigenous Australians, and demonstrate a remarkable story of survival, resilience, and recovery over the past 235 years. However, even today, the Indigenous population remains at only ~ one-third of its median pre-colonial size, with parity to pre-invasion numbers only likely to be achieved by 2050 at the current rate of increase.
R code by Corey Bradshaw (@cjabradshaw)
indigN.R
: includes all code used to derive estimates reported in the paper mentioned above
matrixOperators.r
: functions for manipulating matrices for population projectionsnew_lmer_AIC_tables3.r
: functions to calculate information-theoretic parameters for linear modelsr.squared.r
: functions to calculate goodness of fit for linear models
- NppSahul(0-140ka_rawvalues)_Krapp2021.csv.zip: hindcasted net primary production (kg C m-2 year-1) for 0.5°×0.5° grid cells from 140 ka to the present for Sahul from Krapp et al. (2000) (unzip .csv file first)
- world2013lifetable.csv: age-specific human life-table values from Bradshaw & Brook (2014)
- bindensModelOverlay.csv: population estimates from Binford (2001) using R package
binford
(Marwick et al. 2016) overlayed on carrying-capacity estimates
sp
, raster
, oceanmap
, OceanView
, abind
, pracma
, binford
, rgl
, scatterplot3d
, spatstat
, spatialEco
, SpatialPack
, performance
, sjPlot
, dismo
, gbm
, truncnorm
, bootstrap
The authors acknowledge the sovereign Traditional Owners and custodians (First Nations) of the unceded lands and seas where we live and work, including Bidiagal in Sydney (A.N.W., N.P.), Dharawal in Kamay/Botany Bay (K.B., S.I.), Dharawal in Woolungah/Wollongong (F.S.), Kulin Nation in Naarm/Melbourne (B.G., I.J.M., L.R.), Yirrganydji and Gimuy Walubara Yidinji in Gimuy/Cairns (S.U., M.I.B.), Ngunnawal and Ngambri in Galambary/Canberra (R.T.), Ngarrindjeri of Murrundi/lower Murray River, Kurangk/Coorong, and eastern Fleurieu Peninsula (C.W.), Palawa in Nipaluna/Hobart, lutruwitra/Tasmania (C.W.), Kaurna in Tarndanya/Adelaide (C.J.A.B., M.C.N., F.S.), and Peramangk in Bukatila/Mount Lofty Ranges (C.J.A.B.). The authors also acknowledge and recognise the deep historical and cultural harm our truth-telling exposes, and we commiserate sincerely with all First Nations peoples of Australia.
Funded jointly by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Indigenous and Environmental Histories and Futures (CE230100009), and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CE17010001). L.R. supported by an Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowship (FL190100161). B.G. supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE220100203).