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HERO ID
7875662
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Palaeohydrological variation in a tropical river catchment: a reconstruction using fluorescent bands in corals of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Author(s)
Isdale, PJ; Stewart, BJ; Tickle, KS; Lough, JM
Year
1998
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Holocene
ISSN:
0959-6836
EISSN:
1477-0911
Volume
8
Issue
1
Page Numbers
1-8
DOI
10.1191/095968398670905088
Web of Science Id
WOS:000072528400001
Abstract
Massive, long-lived corals in inshore waters of the Great Barrier Reef contain yellow-green fluorescent bands. These bands are due to terrestrial humic and fulvic compounds incorporated into the coral skeleton during high river flow events. Fluorescence measurements are presented for two colonies of Porites spp. from locations in the path of the Burdekin River floodwaters - the major river in north Queensland draining into the Coral Sea. The records extend from AD 1737 to 1980 and 1644 to 1986, respectively. The two independent coral records show a high degree of similarity. The two series are combined and used to reconstruct Burdekin River runoff for the period Ao 1644 to 1980. The regression model accounts for 83% of the annual (water year) variability of Burdekin River flow and is verified over independent data. The 337-year reconstruction thus increases by threefold the length of record for considering interannual to decadal climate variations in northeast Australia. Instrumental and reconstructed Burdekin River runoff are closely related to an index of summer monsoon rainfall in Queensland. Thus, the reconstruction provides insights into the behaviour over the past three centuries of both a major tropical river system and the highly variable summer monsoon rainfall in northeast Australia. The reconstructed series shows wetter conditions (higher runoff) in the late-seventeenth to mid-eighteenth centuries and in the late-nineteenth century. Drier conditions (lower runoff) are reconstructed in the late-eighteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries and in the mid-twentieth century.
Keywords
palaeohydrology; tropical rivers; runoff; reconstruction; coral fluorescence; Fl Nino; Southern Oscillation; ENSO; Great Barrier Reef; Australia
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