University of Wollongong
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Late-Holocene climatic variability indicated by three natural archives in arid southern Australia

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posted on 2024-11-16, 07:26 authored by Luke GliganicLuke Gliganic, Timothy CohenTimothy Cohen, Jan-Hendrik May, John Jansen, Gerald NansonGerald Nanson, Anthony DossetoAnthony Dosseto, Joshua Larsen, Maxime Aubert
Three terrestrial climate proxies are used to investigate the evolution of Holocene palaeoenvironments in southern central Australia, all of which present a coherent record of palaeohydrology. Single-grain optically stimulated luminescence from sediments supplemented by 14C from charcoal and lacustrine shells was obtained to date shoreline deposits (Lake Callabonna) and the adjacent Mt Chambers Creek alluvial fan. Our findings are complemented by a U/Th-based record of speleothem growth in the Mt Chambers Creek catchment, which we interpret to reflect increased precipitation. Together, these archives shed light on the timing of, and possible sources of water for, Holocene pluvial intervals. We identified several phases of elevated lake levels dated at ~5.8-5.2, 4.5, 3.5-2.7 and 1 kyr, most of which correspond to fluvial activity resulting from increased precipitation in the adjacent ranges. The enhanced hydrology during phases of the late Holocene likely increased the reliability of resources for regional human populations during a time of reduced winter rainfall. When considered within the framework of the current understanding of Holocene palaeoclimate in central Australia, our data suggest that the pattern of landscape response was broadly synchronous with larger scale climatic variability and punctuated by pluvial periods greater than today.

Funding

How green were our deserts? Evidence for Late Quaternary climate change and the source of water in the Lake Eyre basin

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Gliganic, L. A., Cohen, T. J., May, J., Jansen, J. D., Nanson, G. C., Dosseto, A., Larsen, J. R. & Aubert, M. (2014). Late-Holocene climatic variability indicated by three natural archives in arid southern Australia. The Holocene: a major interdisciplinary journal focusing on recent environmental change, 24 (1), 104-117.

Journal title

Holocene

Volume

24

Issue

1

Pagination

104-117

Language

English

RIS ID

85619

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