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The ‘grasses’ of the Big Scrub district of north-eastern New South Wales: a sedimentary record of late Holocene grasslands in a subtropical forest landscape

William E. Boyd, Southern Cross University
B J. Stubbs
C Averill

Abstract

This paper records sedimentary data which indicate that at least part of the Wilsons River floodplain, on the margins of the subtropical rainforest known as the 'Big Scrub', has a long and certainly pre-European history of relative treelessness. Despite a general presumption that this lowland subtropical region was completely forested prior to European settlement, recent historical research has indicated that certain areas were naturally open. While the historical information is clear, the data reported here-a fossil pollen record and one radiocarbon date- reinforces that information for one type of locality, providing an initial indication of time depth.

Suggested Citation

Boyd, WE, Stubbs, BJ & Averill, C 1999, 'The ‘grasses’ of the Big Scrub district of eorth-eastern New South Wales: a sedimentary record of late Holocene grasslands in a subtropical forest landscape', Australian Geographer, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 331-336.

The publisher's version of this article is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049189993611