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Evidence against early nineteenth century major European induced environmental impacts by illegal settlers in the New England Tablelands,south eastern Australia
Authors:Craig Woodward  Jie Chang  Atun Zawadzki  James Shulmeister  Robert Haworth  Sasha Collecutt  Geraldine Jacobsen
Institution:1. School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment, Monash University, Clayton, Vic. 3800, Australia;2. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere Flagship, GPO Box 3023, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia;3. Geography Department, King''s College London, University of London, UK;4. School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan Campus, Brisbane, Qld. 4111, Australia
Abstract:Paleoenvironmental reconstructions from Little Llangothlin Lagoon have been used to argue for early European impact on the eastern Australian landscape. In particular, these studies have argued for European arrival on the New England Tablelands at about 1800 AD, with significant impacts including the clearance of one species of Casuarina before 1820 AD and significant erosion by 1836 AD (Gale et al., 1995; Gale and Pisanu, 2001; Gale and Haworth, 2002, 2005). We have re-cored the lagoon, dated the cores using 210Pb and radiocarbon, and counted pollen and other proxies. Our 210Pb results indicate that 210Pb background was achieved stratigraphically later than the erosion event and we have three early Holocene radiocarbon ages in the erosion event interval. We conclude that the ‘erosion event’ predates European settlement. The 210Pb results indicate much less erosion in response to European settlement than suggested by these earlier studies. We also find no notable decline in Casuarina in the pollen record spanning the time of initial European impact, and in fact we find very little Casuarina in the record. Instead of a Casuarina dominated vegetation we conclude that the area was dominated by open Eucalypt forest prior to European settlement. Rather than changes in the regional vegetation in the early 19th century, we attribute changes in the palynoflora spanning the ‘erosion event’ to changes within the lake/wetland and in particular to changes in the dominance of different species of Myriophyllum; most likely due to water depth fluctuation. This site has stood out as indicating an earlier European impact than other localities in eastern Australia, beyond the original limits of settlement near Sydney. Our findings suggest that a more traditional interpretation of this site is warranted and that no very early impact is discernable.
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