Sedimentation and organic content in the mires and other sites of sediment accumulation in the Sydney region, eastern Australia, in the period after the Last Glacial Maximum

This research reports on a synthesis of radiocarbon (14C) dates and the organic content from a variety of depositional sites in a relatively small region in humid eastern Australia centred on Sydney. We focused on basal dates, changes in accumulation rates and the organic content of these sediment r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quaternary Science Reviews
Main Authors: Mooney, S, Martin, L, Goff, J, Young, ARM
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_78996
https://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/bitstreams/4a846c78-e03c-47c2-8ca0-322b09365b2c/download
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107216
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Summary:This research reports on a synthesis of radiocarbon (14C) dates and the organic content from a variety of depositional sites in a relatively small region in humid eastern Australia centred on Sydney. We focused on basal dates, changes in accumulation rates and the organic content of these sediment records in the period post-dating 21 thousand years ago to make inferences about past environmental conditions, or to infer the timing of past environmental change. We found that low rates of sediment and organic accumulation at the Last Glacial Maximum continued well into the late Pleistocene. The average rate of sediment deposition and organic content increased from about 14.5 calibrated kiloanni before present (cal ka BP), perhaps coincident with Meltwater Pulse 1A, but this was then checked by dry conditions during the Antarctic Climatic Reversal chronozone. An abrupt increase in the average rate of sediment accumulation coincided with the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary (at 11.7 cal ka BP), and this continued until about 9.2 cal ka BP, largely coinciding with the Antarctic thermal maximum, and probably reflecting reduced moisture availability in the Sydney region. Indication of depressed temperature and a more positive moisture availability, from about 9 to 7.6 cal ka BP, witnessed the fastest increase in the number of sites than at any other time. An overall drier early Holocene abruptly altered at about 7.5 cal ka BP and a mid-Holocene ‘optimum’ in moisture availability extended to 6.2 cal ka BP. The compilation of organic contents of the mid-late Holocene suggests environmental variability, but El Niño frequency or strength is not implicated as a driving force. Increased organic productivity, especially after 2.8 cal ka BP, corresponded to a peak in summer insolation, and associated seasonality of insolation and this is likely to have resulted in increased, or more consistent, summer rainfall and easterly air flow into the Sydney region. In contrast to previous generalisations about changes in south-eastern ...