2019
DOI: 10.1177/0959683618824790
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Holocene and recent aeolian reactivation of the Willandra Lakes lunettes, semi-arid southeastern Australia

Abstract: The Willandra Lakes in semi-arid southeastern Australia provide some of the most continuous combined palaeoenvironmental and archaeological records on the continent. These are best preserved within the transverse shoreline (lunette) dunes on their downwind margins. Following final lake retreat c. 15 ka avulsion of the dominant fluvial inflow eastwards, the Willandra lunettes periodically reactivated, experiencing erosion, aeolian redeposition and alluvial sheetwash. These reworked sedimentary archives reflect … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The two LGM ages at the overflow lake, WPL, derive from both sandy and clayey sediments from its inner lunette and likewise suggest oscillating water levels. Both the timing and sediments associated with this phase correlate with the so-called Arumpo unit of oscillating lake filling and drying observed in other Willandra basins (mean age 21.8 ± 3.4 ka; Fitzsimmons et al, 2015), and which represents the final phase of lake filling before the Willandra Creek ceased to flow (Fitzsimmons et al, 2019). The c. 29 ka age for the alternating sands and clayey sands of the WPL outer lunette predates inner lunette deposition.…”
Section: Luminescence Chronologiesmentioning
confidence: 52%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The two LGM ages at the overflow lake, WPL, derive from both sandy and clayey sediments from its inner lunette and likewise suggest oscillating water levels. Both the timing and sediments associated with this phase correlate with the so-called Arumpo unit of oscillating lake filling and drying observed in other Willandra basins (mean age 21.8 ± 3.4 ka; Fitzsimmons et al, 2015), and which represents the final phase of lake filling before the Willandra Creek ceased to flow (Fitzsimmons et al, 2019). The c. 29 ka age for the alternating sands and clayey sands of the WPL outer lunette predates inner lunette deposition.…”
Section: Luminescence Chronologiesmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…The Willandra Lakes are a presently dry chain of five large (and several smaller) lakes located in the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) of semi-arid southeastern Australia, a system best known for its preservation of past hydrological, environmental and archaeological traces (Bowler, 1976;Fitzsimmons et al, 2014;Fitzsimmons et al, 2019;Barrows et al, 2020;Jankowski et al, 2020), including some of the earliest evidence for human occupation on the continent (Bowler, 1998;Bowler et al, 2003). The lakes were fed almost entirely by the Willandra Creek, a distributary of the Lachlan River which has its headwaters in the temperate highlands and which ceased to flow just after the LGM (Fitzsimmons et al, 2014).…”
Section: Willandra Lakes Localities and Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9e; Bowler et al ., 2012). Significant work within Lake Mungo has been conducted by numerous authors (Bowler et al ., 2003; Bowler et al ., 2012; Fitzsimmons et al ., 2014; 2019; Barrows et al ., 2020; Jankowski et al ., 2020). Although there is some variability in the palaeoenvironmental interpretations between these studies, a period of predominantly lake‐full conditions is thought to have existed from ~65 until ~36 ka ago (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The areas of research focus in the Willandra are predominantly on the Lake Mungo lunette, with the other lunettes as subsidiary focus areas. This can be substantiated by even a cursory look at the published material from the Willandra Lakes, summarised by Fitzsimmons et al (Fitzsimmons, Spry, & Stern 2019). Long running projects conducted by Bowler and Stern have predominantly focussed on the Lake Mungo lunette (Please see Figure 20).…”
Section: Categorisation Of Archaeological Sitesmentioning
confidence: 95%