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Human observations of late Quaternary coastal change: Examples from Australia, Europe and the Pacific Islands.

Authors :
Nunn, Patrick D.
Ward, Ingrid
Stéphan, Pierre
McCallum, Adrian
Gehrels, W. Roland
Carey, Genevieve
Clarke, Amy
Cook, Margaret
Geraghty, Paul
Guilfoyle, David
McNeair, Bianca
Miller, Glen
Nakoro, Elia
Reynolds, Doc
Stewart, Lisa
Source :
Quaternary International. Nov2022, Vol. 638, p212-224. 13p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In the aftermath of the last ice age, when sea level rose along most of the world's coastline, the activities of coastal peoples were impacted by coastal submergence, land loss and sometimes isolation as offshore islands formed. In some parts of the world, there is clear evidence that people encoded their observations of postglacial sea-level rise into oral traditions that were communicated across hundreds of generations to reach us today in an intelligible form. In other contexts, people's observations of rising sea level are likely to have formed the foundations of 'legends' about undersea places and the peoples inhabiting them. For a selection of coastal sites in Australia and northwest Europe, this study discusses a range of contrasting situations in which culturally-grounded stories about coastal submergence, land loss and isolation plausibly recollect the nature and effects of postglacial sea-level rise. Using science-based histories of postglacial sea-level change, minimum ages are determined for each group of site-specific stories; in the case of Australia, these range from 7000–11,500 BP, for northwest Europe from 5500 to 9500 BP. For selected sites in the Pacific Islands, where human settlement about 3000 years BP post-dated the end of postglacial sea-level rise, localized submergence is recalled in traditional stories of local people. It is argued that studies of late Quaternary coastal evolution can often be filled out by adding details from stories preserved in local cultures, something which leads to a clearer picture of the human-societal impacts of coastal submergence and land loss than can be obtained from palaeoenvironmental reconstructions and geological evidence alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10406182
Volume :
638
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Quaternary International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159360822
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2022.06.016