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The Holocene
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The Holocene history of mediterraneantype plant communities, Little Desert National Park, Victoria, Australia

I. Thomas

School of Anthropology, Geography and Environmental Studies, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia; i.thomas{at}uiimelb.edu.au

N. J. Enright

C. E. Kenyon

School of Anthropology, Geography and Environmental Studies, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

This paper begins to identify the relative roles of climiiate change, people and fire as factors in the late-Pleistocene and Holocene evolution of one of the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems in southern Australia. Our research illustrates that pollen from mediterranean-type heathlands can be recognized from sediments taken from small basins in semi-arid ecosystems. The use of pollen and carbonized particle analyses from sedimenitcores, in conjunction with ecological research on planit-fire relationships, establishes a role for palaeoecological techniques in the interpretationi of long-term processes in semi-arid heathlands in Australia. Radiocarbon dates indicate that the treeless structure at our study site in the Little Desert of western Victoria has existed since at least the early Holocene. Pollen evidence indicates an increase in plant diversity, especially in Proteaceae and fire ephemerals, and a decrease in fire-sensitive taxa (e.g.. Callitris spp., Allocasuarina muelleriana type) our the last 4000 years. This decline octirs in conjunction with increases in the frequency of carbonized particles.

Key Words: Heathland • fire • pollen analysis • Australia • Holocene • mediterranean-type ecosystems

The Holocene, Vol. 11, No. 6, 691-697 (2001)
DOI: 10.1191/09596830195717


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