Abstract
Landscape evolution of Australia is on the same time scale as global tectonics
and biological evolution. In places, actual landforms and deep weathering
products are hundreds of millions of years old. Much of Australia has a
landscape resulting from stripping of weathered rock after an earlier period
of very deep weathering. Other regions have sequential landforms that provide
a natural laboratory where we can work out the biogeochemistry of the past.
Landforms and regolith reveal the long evolution of groundwater in Australia.
Lateral movement of groundwater is of paramount importance. The effects of
past climates are stored in the landscape. They show that the present is not
the key to the past, and former environments must be worked out from
consistent internal evidence rather than the application of models based on
present-day conditions. Inorganic chemistry alone is inadequate to explain
many earth materials, and biology, especially microbiology, has a very
significant role. Recent and present-day processes also affect the landscape,
and it cannot be assumed that because the landscape and regolith are old the
soils are old. Many regions have a complex regolith cover that shows modern
processes working on inherited materials.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
11 articles.
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