Aim To evaluate the influence of climate and Aboriginal landscape management on Holocene vegetation and fire activity. Location Flinders Island, Bass Strait, Tasmania where archaeological data document extended periods of human presence and absence over the past 12,000 years. Methods We evaluated climate–human–fire interactions through high-resolution pollen, charcoal and geochemical analyses of sediment cores from two wetland sites. Proxies for environmental change are qualitatively compared with archaeological data documenting Aboriginal occupation and later abandonment during the mid-Holocene. Results Warm and dry conditions of the early Holocene combined with anthropogenic ignitions promoted frequent fires that sust...
Pollen analysis of a core taken from a reed marsh in northeastern Tasmania near Bass Strait highligh...
The extent of prehistoric human impact on the environment is a contentious topic in various palaeo-e...
The temperate Eucalyptus savannas in the Midlands of Tasmania are ancient ecosystems where fire and ...
Aim: To evaluate the influence of climate and Aboriginal landscape management on Holocene vegetation...
Indigenous land use and climate have shaped fire regimes in southeast Australia during the Holocene,...
Two swamp sites on Flinders Island in Bass Strait provide evidence of vegetation cover for the perio...
© 2019 Sarah CooleyThe predicted increase of climate-driven wildfires poses a threat to the endemic ...
An analysis of ethnohistorical sources, modem pollen rain, fossil pollen, contemporary vegetation p...
We aim to understand how did cool temperate rainforest respond to changes in climate and fire activi...
© 2017 Dr. Michela MarianiUnder the current changing climatic regime, in which wildfires are predict...
In Australia, the drivers of precolonial fire regimes remain contentious, with some advocating an an...
Global change poses a major threat to ecosystems and biodiversity. This is particularly evident in s...
Fire activity was reconstructed at five sites and vegetation history at three sites in northwest Tas...
Aim: To assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody...
The Earth system – a complex interplay of climate, landscapes, fire, ecosystems, and people – is on ...
Pollen analysis of a core taken from a reed marsh in northeastern Tasmania near Bass Strait highligh...
The extent of prehistoric human impact on the environment is a contentious topic in various palaeo-e...
The temperate Eucalyptus savannas in the Midlands of Tasmania are ancient ecosystems where fire and ...
Aim: To evaluate the influence of climate and Aboriginal landscape management on Holocene vegetation...
Indigenous land use and climate have shaped fire regimes in southeast Australia during the Holocene,...
Two swamp sites on Flinders Island in Bass Strait provide evidence of vegetation cover for the perio...
© 2019 Sarah CooleyThe predicted increase of climate-driven wildfires poses a threat to the endemic ...
An analysis of ethnohistorical sources, modem pollen rain, fossil pollen, contemporary vegetation p...
We aim to understand how did cool temperate rainforest respond to changes in climate and fire activi...
© 2017 Dr. Michela MarianiUnder the current changing climatic regime, in which wildfires are predict...
In Australia, the drivers of precolonial fire regimes remain contentious, with some advocating an an...
Global change poses a major threat to ecosystems and biodiversity. This is particularly evident in s...
Fire activity was reconstructed at five sites and vegetation history at three sites in northwest Tas...
Aim: To assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody...
The Earth system – a complex interplay of climate, landscapes, fire, ecosystems, and people – is on ...
Pollen analysis of a core taken from a reed marsh in northeastern Tasmania near Bass Strait highligh...
The extent of prehistoric human impact on the environment is a contentious topic in various palaeo-e...
The temperate Eucalyptus savannas in the Midlands of Tasmania are ancient ecosystems where fire and ...