Fire, humans and climate as drivers of environmental change on Broughton Island, New South Wales, Australia

Date

Authors

Mooney, Scott
Hope, Geoffrey
Horne, Dylan
Kamminga, Johan
Williams, Alan N.

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Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Abstract

In Australia, the drivers of precolonial fire regimes remain contentious, with some advocating an anthropogenic-dominated regime, and others highlighting the importance of climate, climatic variability or alternatively some nexus between climate and human activity. Here, we explore the inter-relationships between fire, humans and vegetation using macroscopic charcoal, archaeology and palynology over the last ~5430 cal. year BP from Broughton Island, a small, near-shore island located in eastern Australia. We find a clear link between fire and the reduction of arboreal pollen and rainforest indicators on the island, especially at ~4.0 ka and in the last ~1000years. Similarities with comparable palaeoenvironmental records of fire in the region and a record of strong El Nino (dry, fire-prone) events supports the contention that climate was a significant influence on the fire regimes of Broughton Island. However, two periods of enhanced fire activity, at ~4000 years BP and ~<600 years BP have weaker links to climate, and perhaps reflect anthropogenic activity. Changes to the fire regime in the last ~600years corresponds with the earliest evidence of Indigenous archaeology on the island, and coincides with implications that Polynesian people were present in the region. After the mid-Twentieth Century a human-dominated fire regime is also an obvious feature of the reconstructed fire record on Broughton Island.

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Citation

Source

The Holocene

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Access Statement

Open Access via publisher website

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31