Reconciling 22,000 years of landscape openness in a renowned wilderness

Author:

Fletcher Michael‐Shawn1ORCID,Romano Anthony1ORCID,Lisé‐Pronovost Agathe1ORCID,Mariani Michela2ORCID,Henriquez William1ORCID,Gadd Patricia3ORCID,Heijnis Hendrik3ORCID,Hodgson Dominic4ORCID,Blaauw Maarten5ORCID,Sculthorpe Andry6

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. School of Geography University of Nottingham Nottinghamshire UK

3. Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation Lucas Heights New South Wales Australia

4. British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge Cambridgeshire UK

5. Queen’s University Belfast Belfast UK

6. Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre Hobart Tasmania Australia

Abstract

AbstractHere, we explore the profound impact of the Tasmanian Aboriginal (Palawa) people on Tasmanian landscapes by examining a 22,000‐year record of landscape change from Lake Selina in western Tasmania, Australia. We analysed a sediment core for palaeoecological proxies, namely, pollen (vegetation), charcoal (fire), and geochemical data (landscape weathering). This study reveals that the contemporary landscape is a product of Palawa people’s intentional and strategic fire management practices characterised by fire‐dependent buttongrass moorland and the absence of climax rainforest. Specifically, our data show that rainforest failed to re‐establish a dominance at Lake Selina following the end of the Last Glacial Maximum, as temperature and moisture increased as a result of Palawa cultural fire for at least 18,000 years. This finding challenges the long‐held notion that Tasmania’s wilderness is a product of the absence of human activity. Rather, archaeological sites across western and central Tasmania demonstrate long term presence, with some of the highest artefact and faunal bone densities in the world. The study contributes to the recognition of Tasmania’s west as a cultural landscape shaped by generations of Aboriginal care for Country and fire practices.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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