Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4736250 Quaternary Science Reviews 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Currently there is a paucity of records of late Quaternary palaeoenvironmental variability available from the subtropics of Australia. The three continuous palaeoecological records presented here, from North Stradbroke Island, subtropical Queensland, assist in bridging this large spatial gap in the current state of knowledge. The dominance of arboreal taxa in the pollen records throughout the past >40,000 years is in contrast with the majority of records from temperate Australia, and indicates a positive moisture balance for North Stradbroke Island. The charcoal records show considerable inter-site variability indicating the importance of local-scale events on individual records, and highlighting the caution that needs to be applied when interpreting a single site as a regional record. The variability in the burning regimes is interpreted as being influenced by both climatic and human factors. Despite this inter-site variability, broad environmental trends are identifiable, with changes in the three records comparable with the OZ-INTIMATE climate synthesis for the last 35,000 years.

► Continuous records indicate a positive moisture balance for the last +40,000 years. ► Arboreal taxa dominate North Stradbroke Island for the late Quaternary period. ► Substantial spatial variability is observed in the pollen and charcoal records. ► Vegetation changes are influenced by late Quaternary Australian climate regimes. ► Burning regimes are influenced by a combination of climatic and human factors.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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