AACAI STUDENT SUPPORT FUND

Two of AACAI's objectives are to: (1) support and encourage research into all forms of archaeology, and (2) promote the training of students in archaeology. Our Association runs a Student Support Fund every year to enable us to achieve those objectives.

The Fund is generously donated by archaeological consultants and managed by a subcommittee of AACAI with applications assessed in a regulated process. They are awarded close to the start of the academic year. Students are able to spend the money in the way that they decide is appropriate, either to support research costs or to assist with living expenses. No receipting of expenses is required; however, the recipient is requested to acknowledge AACAI in their thesis and any published material resulting from the research. Publication of at least an abstract (though we would prefer a full paper) in the AACAI journal is also requested, along with a post for our newsletter.

Information for the AACAI Student Support Fund for 2026 is found below.

AACAI Student Support Fund 2026 Application Guide

Below, students will find a guide on how to apply for the fund. If you have any queries about the application process, please reach out to us at [email protected]

FORMS

INSTRUCTIONS AND GUIDELINES FOR STUDENTS

  • Fill out Part 1 - Student Form

  • Demonstrate how your research project connects to or contributes to consulting archaeological practice

  • Attach a copy of your academic transcript

  • If you are a Masters student, attach proof that your course has a research thesis component

  • Seek at least one referee to support your application – this must be a person involved in your research project

  • Ask your referee to fill out Part 2 – Referee Form

  • Forms must be returned via email to [email protected]

APPLICATION DEADLINE: 30 APRIL 2026

AACAI Student Support Fund 2026 Donors

The funding for this year's AACAI Student Support Fund has been generously supported by the following archaeological consultancies

Comber Consultants

Comber Consultants is based in Central Tilba, NSW and have recently merged with Unearthed Archaeology Pty Ltd.

Comber Consultants has provided best practice end-to-end archaeological and multidisciplinary heritage management solutions for over 30 years, and they are committed to excellence and quality in the provision of award-winning services. Comber Consultants has donated to the AACAI Student Support over many years.

Associates Archaeology & Heritage

Associates Archaeology & Heritage is the sole trader Aboriginal heritage consultancy of Oliver Brown, working in Sydney’s coastal sandstone country.

Oliver helped to establish the AACAI Student Support Fund back in 2010 when he could still just remember the real struggles of balancing living expenses and the challenges of a budding archaeologist's first serious and ambitious tilt at independent, unfunded research. Having asked for donations from others and now living the easy life, it would be frankly rude if he didn't contribute.

Wallis Heritage Consulting

Wallis Heritage Consulting has staff based in South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland.

Wallis Heritage Consulting has professional expertise in Aboriginal cultural heritage and archaeological research, and they are actively engaged in shaping heritage standards through extensive involvements in professional, academic and community organisations. Wallis Heritage Consulting has contributed to the AACAI Student Support Fund in the past.

Big Island Research

Big Island Research are a Perth based heritage consultancy who works across all regions of Western Australia.

Big Island Research specialises in archaeological, anthropological and cultural heritage management and offers expertise in all aspects of Aboriginal heritage assessment, management and research to a broad client base including Aboriginal Representative Bodies and Prescribed Bodies Corporate (PBCs), private proponents, local governments and museums.

Heritage Now

Heritage Now is an archaeological and heritage consulting company that operates in NSW.

Heritage Now undertakes Aboriginal and historical excavations, surveys, assessments and post-excavation analysis from their offices in Sydney and Newcastle. We support the AACAI Student Support Fund because we’d like to back the next generation of archaeologists.

RJ Heritage

RJ Heritage is based in Toowoomba, Queensland.

RJ Heritage have over 18 years' experience in cultural heritage management and native title throughout Australia and Papua New Guinea. They have experience in both the private and public sectors with many Traditional Owner groups and clients from
mining to transport across Australia.

AACAI Student Support Fund 2025 Recipients

Congratulations to the successful recipients for last year's AACAI Student Support Fund
Year Name University

Project

2025 Jonathan Bennett University of Sydney Use-wear analysis of Holocene backed and non-backed retouched artefacts from SE Australia
2025 Kayla Turner James Cook University Approaching artefact biographies from Jiigurru-Lizard Island Group, Northern Great Barrier Reef
2025 Joseph Roth University of Queensland Ripples of Parramatta's Agrarian Past: How Archaeologists interact with and conserve the Archaeology of Colonial Agriculture
2025 Sayed Nezam University of Western Australia Sacred or Mythological: A Critical Analysis of Indigenous Sacred Heritage Management in Western Australia

History of the AACAI Student Support Fund

The AACAI Student Support Fund was established in 2010 to provide financial assistance to Honours and coursework Masters students engaged in research that directly contributes to consulting archaeological practice. Since then we have distributed $66,198 to 37 recipients (approximately $1,800 per person).
Over the years, a number of AACAI-supporting consultancies have generously donated to the Student Support Fund as follows: Comber Consultants, Heritage Now, Big Island Research, Associates Archaeology & Heritage, Wallis Heritage Consulting, Extent Heritage, Jem Archaeology, Ochre Imprints, Thomson Cultural Heritage Management, Virtus Heritage, Vivienne Wood Heritage Consultant, Archae-aus, Archaeological Management and Consulting Group, Everick Heritage Consultants, North Queensland Heritage, Artefact Heritage Services, Huonbrook Environment and Heritage, Ironbark Heritage and Environment, and Alpha Archaeology.

Previous Recipients of the AACAI Student Support Fund

Year

Name

University

Project

             2022              

Samantha Cranwell

James Cook University

Analysing the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act (Qld) 2003: How effective has this legislation been in protecting Aboriginal cultural heritage?

2022

Juan Alejandro Marquez Lopez

Flinders University

Chasing Narnooroo: An overview of cultural relevance and occupation patterns in the Upper Murray River Gorge, South Australia

2022

Jarrod Van der Weide

University of Western Australia

Identifying and Mitigating the Risk of Recreational Disturbance to Recently Identified Archaeological and Cultural Heritage Sites in Wandoo National Park, Western Australia

2022

Keeley Wood

Griffith University

From Past to Present: A Study of Photographic Records of Rock Art in Southeast Cape York Peninsula

2021

Ruby Todorovski

University of Queensland                  

Internationalising Intangible Cultural Heritage: A Study of UNESCO's 2003 Convention and Postcolonial Nations

2020

Aimee Henderson

Griffith University

Ancient DNA to Provenance, Revitalise and Repatriate Material Culture

2020

Cameron Neal

University of Sydney

On the top of a mountain I saw the figure of a man: An analysis of the relationship between sensory perception and the engraved art of the Sydney-Hawkesbury region using GIS and the concept of afffordances

2020

Jacqueline Turner

University of New England

In the Groove: Evaluating precolonial Aboriginal mobility in the New England Tablelands using non-destructive pXRF of stone artefacts from excavations of the Gostwyck Grinding Groove site

2019

Emily Martin

University of Western Australia

The exploration of underfloor deposits relating to drug use: Artillery Drill Hall, Fremantle WA

2018

Christopher Clark

University of Queensland

Handling the Heritage of a Non-Event: The Heritage Management of Brisbanes Air-Raid Shelters

2018

Caroline Hawker

La Trobe University

A technological analysis of tachylite assemblages from Dja Dja Wurrung country

2018

Alexandra Seifertova

University of Sydney

Landscape and its role in the detection of sites in the central lowlands of the Hunter Valley and the Cumberland Plains

2018

Helena van der Riet

University of Western Australia

The archaeology of the Japanese occupation of Christmas Island (CI), Indian Ocean, between 1942 and 1945

2017

Lauren Louise Churchill

University of Sydney

Foodways in regional New South Wales in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: A study of butchery patterns

2017

Rodina Goranitis

University of Queensland

Doing it right: Best practice standards in cultural heritage management

2017

Rebekah Hawkins

University of Sydney

Exploring the relationship between raw material and morphology in a lithic assemblage from Lake George NSW: A close look at backed artefacts and core production and their connection to raw material

2017

Jacinta Koolmatrie

Flinders University

Adnyamathanha Yura Malka

2017

Liam Norris

Australian National University

Analysis of the Guerrilla Bay and Rosedale middens, Tomakin, NSW

2016

Lara Tooby

University of Sydney

Shell monuments: What can shell deposits in Ballina reveal about socio-cultural processes of the past?

2016

Karen Horn

University of Western Australia

Paint recipes: Can near infra-red analysis detect anthropogenic organic materials added to ochre to make paint?

2016

Lorna Cooper

University of Western Australia

An archaeology of the dynamic physical and social landscape of Gallop House, WA: Using geospatial and geophysical techniques to interrogate archival resources within a historical archaeological and heritage management context

2016

Sarah Slater

James Cook University

Exploring a novel site expression of Polymesoda erosa in the archaeological record of the South Wellesley Islands

2015

Emmy Frost

La Trobe University

Investigating Indigenous occupation and subsistence strategies at a late Holocene marine shell midden in south-western Victoria

2015

Anna Kreij

James Cook University

Modified landscapes: High-resolution LiDAR mapping and analysis of Indigenous fishtraps

2015

Lee Sheppard

University of Queensland

Cultural heritage offsets in the mining industry

2014

Adrian Mollenmans                         

Flinders University

An analysis of Aboriginal fish traps on Yorke Peninsula, South Australia

2014

B'geela Romano

University of Western Australia

Managing graffiti and other inscriptions at Fremantle Prison UNESCO World Heritage Site

2014

Paul Smithson

University of Western Australia

Scratching the surface: A comparitive assessment of a surface stone artefact concentration at a multi component Aboriginal archaeological site from the Weld Range, Western Australia

2013

Charlotte Feakins

University of Sydney

From hideouts to hangouts: Materialising myths at buffalo bush camps on the South Alligator River, Kakadu National Park

2013

Katie Woo

University of Queensland

The effect of sample size on the analyses of faunal assemblages

2013

Texas Nagel

James Cook University

Using foraminifera to refine understandings of archaeological site formation processes: A case study from Thundiy, Bentinck Island, Southern Gulf of Carpentaria

2012

Yinika Perston

University of New England

Assessing 'ad hoc' lithic technologies in Australasian archaeology

2011

Tamika Goward

University of Sydney

Flaked glass in the Sydney region

2011

Elyse Beck

University of New England

Evaluation of PXRF for rapid on-site artefact characterisation: A case study using coarse ware ceramics from Central Anatolia

2011

Rebecca Andrews

University of Sydney

Memorials in carved stone

2010

James Smith

University of Queensland

The role of the Burra Charter in structuring Australian Aboriginal cultural heritage management practice

2010

Melissa Hetherington                            

Australian National University

A scattered landscape: Analysis of the shell middens EU-IC-ASM-0862 and EU-IC-WAM-0847 South to investigate coastal resource use on Mainland Infrastructure Corridor, Pilbara, Western Australia