TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental context for late Holocene human occupation of the South Wellesley Archipelago, Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia
AU - Moss, Patrick
AU - Mackenzie, Lydia
AU - Ulm, Sean
AU - Sloss, Craig
AU - Rosendahl, Daniel
AU - Petherick, Lynda
AU - Steinberger, Lincoln
AU - Wallis, Lynley
AU - Heijnis, Henk
AU - Petchey, Fiona
AU - Jacobsen, Geraldine
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported under the Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme (project number DP120103179 ). Sean Ulm is the recipient of an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (project number FT120100656 ). The authors would like to thank AINSE Ltd for providing financial assistance (Awards PGRA10903 and ALNGRA11019 ) and to Jack Goralewski, Atun Zawadzki and Fiona Bertuch for their assistance. We acknowledge Kaiadilt traditional owners of the South Wellesley Islands as partners in this research. The Kaiadilt Aboriginal Corporation collaborated in establishing the research framework for this project. We thank Duncan Kelly, Rene Simpson, Nicholas Evans, Carl and Eunice Oberdorf, John and Melinda Barton, and Tex and Lyn Battle for support and advice.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA.
PY - 2015/10/22
Y1 - 2015/10/22
N2 - A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia. Three phases of wetland development are identified, with a protected coastal setting from ca. 2400 to 500 years ago, transitioning into an estuarine mangrove forest from ca. 500 years ago to the 1940s, and finally to a freshwater swamp over the past +60 years. This sequence reflects the influence of falling sea-levels, development of a coastal dune barrier system, prograding shorelines, and an extreme storm (cyclone) event. In addition, there is clear evidence of the impacts that human abandonment and resettlement have on the island's fire regimes and vegetation. A dramatic increase in burning and vegetation thickening was observed after the cessation of traditional Indigenous Kaiadilt fire management practices in the 1940s, and was then reversed when people returned to the island in the 1980s. In terms of the longer context for human occupation of the South Wellesley Archipelago, it is apparent that the mangrove phase provided a stable and productive environment that was conducive for human settlement of this region over the past 1000 years.
AB - A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia. Three phases of wetland development are identified, with a protected coastal setting from ca. 2400 to 500 years ago, transitioning into an estuarine mangrove forest from ca. 500 years ago to the 1940s, and finally to a freshwater swamp over the past +60 years. This sequence reflects the influence of falling sea-levels, development of a coastal dune barrier system, prograding shorelines, and an extreme storm (cyclone) event. In addition, there is clear evidence of the impacts that human abandonment and resettlement have on the island's fire regimes and vegetation. A dramatic increase in burning and vegetation thickening was observed after the cessation of traditional Indigenous Kaiadilt fire management practices in the 1940s, and was then reversed when people returned to the island in the 1980s. In terms of the longer context for human occupation of the South Wellesley Archipelago, it is apparent that the mangrove phase provided a stable and productive environment that was conducive for human settlement of this region over the past 1000 years.
KW - Abandonment
KW - Cyclone
KW - Fire regimes
KW - Indigenous
KW - Islands
KW - Palynology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84944152517&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.quaint.2015.02.051
DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2015.02.051
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84944152517
SN - 1040-6182
VL - 385
SP - 136
EP - 144
JO - Quaternary International
JF - Quaternary International
ER -