Tom Hubble
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Authors
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Our research released today conclusively shows what has long been suspected: 6,000 years ago, water levels in the Lower Murray River were so high that much of the system in South Australia comprised a huge lake.
We also uncovered an invaluable long-term record of floods and droughts in the Murray Darling Basin, by drilling deep into layers of silt and clay built up over 12,000 years.
Our findings point to how Australia’s most important river system might be altered by future sea level rise. What’s more, a better record of past floods and drought will help manage water use in Australia’s most important river system.
The Lower Murray River today and a computer-generated image of what Lake Mannum may have looked like between 5,000 and 8,500 years ago when sea levels were 2 metres higher than they are today. Original photo: Tom Hubble. Modified image: Kathirine Sentas.
Probing the past
Our climate is changing and sea levels are rising. Scientists are working hard to forecast what environments such as rivers and estuaries will look like under higher sea levels and, in Australia, more intense droughts and floods.
One way to do this is to look back to a period 5,000-8,000 years ago, to a point in the sea level cycle known as the Holocene highstand. The Holocene refers to the past 11,700 years or so of Earth’s history. The highstand is the point at which sea levels were highest.
Today, the Murray River crosses into South Australia and flows within a narrow valley, then gradually widens towards Lake Alexandrina where it empties into the sea.
But it wasn’t always this way. After the peak of the last glacial period 18,000 years ago, melting ice caused sea levels to rise from about 120 metres below today’s level. About 6,000 years ago, sea level peaked at two metres above today’s level.
Researchers have previously hypothesised that over several thousand years, the high sea level at the mouth of the Murray acted like a dam, causing water to back up in the river, creating a saltwater lake known as Lake Mannum.
Our research confirms that the lake existed, and that it was enormous - stretching from the mouth of the Murray to about 200 kilometres upstream near Swan Reach.
We used high resolution two- and three-dimensional modelling modelling of water levels and flows to confirm the presence of the lake, and how it formed.
Layers of history
The naturally still waters of Lake Mannum acted as a enormous trap for clay and silt discharged upstream. Under various conditions, such as floods, the sediment travelled downstream and settled to the lake’s floor.
Today, the climate history for the Murray-Darling Basin is written in these sediment layers.
We collected a 30 metre-long sediment core from the present day floodplain of the Lower Murray River.
The core contains an 11-metre section of sediment deposited on the floor of Lake Mannum between 8,500 and 5,000 years ago. Each metre took roughly 315 years to accumulate - about three millimetres a year.
We believe each layer in the core probably represents an episode of increased or decreased river flow.
Most layers were probably produced when snow melt from the Australian Alps in spring and summer transported mud along the river system. Some layers will represent large floods that came down the Murray River, while others will represent floods that flowed down the Darling.
Longer-term variations in the thickness of the layers may correspond to extended periods of wetter and drier weather.
The next phase of our research will involve a close analysis of the sediment layers to obtain a reliable, detailed, high resolution record of flood and drought in the Murray Darling Basin.
What can we learn?
As sea level dropped to modern levels over the last 5,000 years, the lake slowly drained and turned back into a river.
These days, the lower Murray River is intensively managed. Five barrages, or barriers, have been erected near the river mouth to keep the water fresh by preventing seawater from creeping in, and to maintain water levels. Significant volumes of water have been extracted for irrigation and domestic use.
Some people argue the barrages should be removed to restore the natural tidal estuary and allow sea water to influence lake levels. Their removal is unlikely in the near future. But our research gives insight into what could happen if the barrages were removed, and sea levels rise under climate change.
The Lower Murray River near Mannum confined within the Lower Murray Gorge. Photo: Tom Hubble |
In future, water managers deciding on water allocations may benefit from knowing how much water has historically come down the system, and how often.
Links
- (AU) No Water, No Leadership: New Murray Darling Basin Report Reveals States’ Climate Gamble
- Murray-Darling Basin Inspector-General To Oversee Water Efficiency, Compliance And Allegations Of Theft
- Barwon-Darling River Faces 'Collapse' From Government Mistakes: Report
- How Taxpayers Are Funding A Huge Corporate Expansion In The Murray-Darling Basin
- Murray-Darling Report Shows Public Authorities Must Take Climate Change Risk Seriously
- Scientists hate to say ‘I told you so’. But Australia, you were warned
- Atypical responses of a large catchment river to the Holocene sea-level highstand: The Murray River, Australia
- A rare natural phenomenon brings severe drought to Australia. Climate change is making it more common
- Geomechanical modeling of the Murray’s Millennium Drought river bank failures: a case of the unexpected consequences of slow drawdown, soft bank materials and anthropogenic change
- Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise
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