Palaeoclimate and human occupation in southeastern arid Australia
Autor: | Peter Hiscock, Philip Hughes, Marjorie Sullivan |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
010506 paleontology
Archeology Global and Planetary Change 060102 archaeology Pleistocene Archaeological record Geology 06 humanities and the arts 01 natural sciences Arid Prehistory Paleontology Deglaciation 0601 history and archaeology Physical geography Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Holocene Arid zone 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Quaternary Science Reviews. 163:72-83 |
ISSN: | 0277-3791 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.03.014 |
Popis: | This review focuses on the relationships between palaeoenvironmental change and prehistoric occupation in the driest part of the Australian arid zone. Palaeoclimatic evidence from the last ∼60 ka identified fluctuating periods of wet and dry conditions during the late Pleistocene and Holocene. For most of this period conditions were arid, including during the Holocene, and maximum aridity occurred at the LGM which peaked at ∼21 ka. Maximum wetness occurred before ∼45 ka, at ∼33–31 ka and episodically during the deglaciation between ∼18 and 11 ka. The pre-LGM archaeological record is extremely sparse but records from the LGM through to the mid Holocene show people occupied the dunefields and stony plains during prolonged wet periods in the deglaciation and largely abandoned them during drier phases, retreating to better-watered refuges. Human occupation in dunefields from the LGM through to the mid Holocene can be used as a proxy for past climates. From the late Holocene changes in settlement patterns were made possible by the social, economic and technological adaptations which allowed people to occupy what became an increasingly harsh environment. These reconstructions were facilitated by discoveries in the Roxby dunefield of buried stratified layers of stone artefacts in dune sands, dated by single–grain luminescence analyses. These discoveries indicate the possibility that hitherto unreported cultural sequences, potentially dating back to >50 ka, may be present in many Australian dunefields. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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