The Byron landslip scar. This is the fifth in a series on the Aboriginal peopling of New England drawn from the introductory course I have been running on New England's history.
Aboriginal oral
tradition records memories of great floods as the sea rushed in. These are
usually attributed to large scale sea level rises as the icy conditions of the
Last Glacial Maximum (21,000 to 15,000 years ago) eased and sea levels rose.
I suspect that’s
broadly true, but they may also included memories of submarine landslide
induced tsunamis, many of which occurred over the last 25,000 years along the
Southern Queensland and Northern NSW coasts.
These tsunamis came
about because of land collapses along the steeply sloping continental shelf.
These collapses sent great blocks of rock and sediment plunging down the
steeply sloping shelf out to sea over distances up too 100km and depths of
3,000m. You can imagine the effects on sea levels.
While spectacular,
these changes were only a small part of the challenges faced by Australia’s
Aboriginal peoples.
In my last column, I
discussed what the Aboriginal occupation of New England might have looked like
perhaps 40,000 years ago.
The Aborigines had
arrived on the ancient content called Sahul at a time when the climate was
colder but damper.
From
perhaps 25,000 years ago, the environment deteriorated significantly.
Globally,
the ice spread. As it did, the climate became colder and drier, deserts spread
and trees retreated. This climatic regime peaked during the Last Glacial
Maximum 21,000 to 15,000 years ago.
Sahul became
very dry, both intensely hot and intensely cold. Sea levels fell by 60+ metres
to perhaps 130 metres below current levels. Sea
temperatures fell to 2-4 degrees C below those of today.
The effects across New England were
dramatic. In the west, there were cold arid conditions. The deserts expanded
eastwards. Stream flow was reduced. Trees and animals retreated.. In the east,
the falling sea levels revealed a rugged inhospitable shore. While the coastal
areas remained relatively well watered, food resources would have been reduced.
On the New
England Tablelands, average temperatures fell by perhaps 8 degrees C. The
Tablelands marked the start of a region of cold steppe and scattered sub-alpine
woodland sweeping down through the southern Snowy Mountains into Tasmania,
making it an inhospitable region for human habitation.
Faced with these changing conditions, the
Aborigines would have been forced to retreat to refuge areas where food was
still available. Some groups would have perished.
Better conditions lay ahead, but challenges
had to be surmounted first.
This post appeared as a column in the on-line edition of the Armidale Express on 23 April 2020. I am repeating the columns here with a lag because they are not all on line outside subscription. You can see all the Belshaw World and History Revisited/History Matters columns by clicking here for 2009, here for 2010, here for 2011, here for 2012, here for 2013, here for 2014, here for 2015, here for 2016, here 2017, here 2018, here 2019, here 2020
2 comments:
Do we know what conditions were like in Tasmania and Gippsland at this time Jim, and if so how did they compare to those on the New England Tablelands. I was thinking of cultural and technological adaptation to climate and environmental change.
“Once an everyday item for Aboriginal people in south-eastern Australia, possum skin cloaks were worn for warmth, used as baby carriers, coverings at night, drums in ceremony and for burial. Incised and painted with ochre, possum skin cloaks also mapped the identity of their owner, holding stories of clan and Country.”
A Possum Skin Cloak | Australian Institute of Aboriginal and ...
Hi John. That's an interesting comment. The short answer is that I don't know and should! We know that Tasmania was inhabited during the LGM, but I haven't looked at other places. I pulled out Josephine Flood's The Moth Hunters. Aboriginal Prehistory of the Australian Alps (Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies 1980) which suggests a somewhat similar pattern to New England.
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