Evidence for a change in wind regime during the Last Glacial Maximum from the Sydney region
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 03:38authored byBruce Thom, Thomas Oliver
This paper presents the results of a small number of dates from sand samples collected at building sites in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. OSL ages of well-sorted, quartz sand ranges from 31 to 24 ka from within well-developed podzol soil profiles within a metre of the surface. The source of this sand appears to be from the east off the inner continental shelf during a period just prior to the maximum of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, Marine Isotope Stage 2) when sea-level was approximately 70-90 m below present level. During a later phase of the LGM, there is evidence from other coastal sites in central NSW and Gippsland, Victoria, that the dominant wind was from the west consistent with evidence from arid and semiarid Australia. Dune orientations in northern NSW into Queensland and other evidence at this time appear to reflect winds from the southeast quadrant. This study highlights the existence of a potential pivot area in dominant wind direction during the LGM between sustained westerly flow in southern area including Victoria and northeast Tasmania and southeast flow of northern NSW into Queensland. In central NSW, the circulation switched from easterly in Stage 2 to westerly as the glacial stage intensified in the LGM sometime after ca 25 ka.
Funding
Sedimentary processes on sandy coasts in southern Australia
Thom, B. G. & Oliver, T. S.N. (2019). Evidence for a change in wind regime during the Last Glacial Maximum from the Sydney region. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 66 (2), 279-288.