Lake Mungo, dried-up lake and archaeological site in west-central New South Wales, Australia, located in and around Mungo National Park. Lake Mungo is one of 17 dried Pleistocene Epoch (about 2.6 million to 11,700 years go) lake beds in the Willandra Lakes region, which was designated a World Heritage site in 1981.
Lake Mungo, which dried up about 14,000 years ago, became one of the world’s most important archaeological sites when geologist Jim Bowler unearthed the remains of a young Aboriginal woman in 1968. The bones of the skeleton, referred to as Mungo Lady, had been burnt before burial, making them the world’s oldest evidence of cremation and ceremonial burial. In 1974 Bowler discovered the complete skeleton of a man, known as Mungo Man. Carbon-14 dating indicated that these remains were approximately 40,000 years old, meaning that Mungo Lady and Mungo Man were the oldest human remains found in Australia to that date.
Other human remains as well as hundreds of artifacts have been found in the lunettes (crescent-shaped sand dunes) of Lake Mungo and the Willandra Lakes region. These fossils provide a long continuous record of how the Aboriginal people lived around the Willandra Lakes and how they adapted to the environmental changes that took place around them. Among the numerous valuable sources of evidence are middens (food waste, including shellfish, fish, yabbies [crayfish] and mammals), fireplaces, stone tools, and other objects that predate the ice age. Another important archaeological find occurred in 2003, when 20,000-year-old footprints of the Willandra people were uncovered. The Lake Mungo site is not only of great archaeological significance but it also provides important spiritual and cultural links for its traditional owners—the Paakantji, Ngiampaa, and Mutthi Mutthi people—to their ancestors.