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Redating the onset of burning at Lynch's Crater (North Queensland): implications for human settlement in Australia

✍ Scribed by C. S. M. Turney; A. P. Kershaw; P. Moss; M. I. Bird; L. K. Fifield; R. G. Cresswell; G. M. Santos; M. L. Di Tada; P. A. Hausladen; Y. Zhou


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
113 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0267-8179

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Lynch's Crater preserves a continuous, high‐resolution record of environmental changes in north Queensland. This record suggests a marked increase in burning that appears to be independent of any known major climatic boundaries. This increase is accompanied, or closely followed, by the virtually complete replacement of rainforest by sclerophyll vegetation. The absence of any major climatic shift associated with this increase in fire frequency therefore has been interpreted as a result of early human impact in the area. The age for this increase in burning, on the basis of conventional radiocarbon dating, was previously thought to be approximately 38 000 ^14^C yr BP, supporting the traditional model for human arrival in Australia at 40 000 ^14^C yr BP Here we have applied a more rigorous pre‐treatment and graphitisation procedure for radiocarbon dating samples from the Lynch's Crater sequence. These new dates suggest that the increase in fire frequency occurred at 45 000 ^14^C yr BP, supporting the alternative view that human occupation of Australia occurred by at least 45 000–55 000 cal. yr BP. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.