*Stephen J Gallagher1, Vera K Korasidis1, Gerald Auer2, David De Vleeschouwer3, Jeroen Groeneveld4, Beth Chrisitensen5
(1.University of Melbourne, 2.University of Graz, 3.Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster , 4.National Taiwan University, 5.Rowan University)
Keywords:Australian Monsoon, Pseudo-Monsoon, Quasi-Monsoon, Quaternary
The Australian monsoon is part of the global monsoon often included in the Asian Monsoon system, however due to their hemispheric positions, the dry (wet) Australian winter (summer) monsoon coincides with the wet summer Asian monsoon and vice-versa. The Australian monsoon controls rainfall distribution in northern tropical Australia where over 80% of the median annular rainfall occurs from December to March, the summer wet season. Three types of the Australian monsoon are distinguished based on distinct atmospheric circulation and heating patterns: a northwest Pseudo-Monsoon, a northeast Quasi-Monsoon and an Australian Monsoon (sensu stricto) north of Australia. While the modern climatology of the Australian monsoon has been extensively documented, its paleohistory is poorly constrained, especially in Australia’s continental interior where harsh arid climatic conditions have degraded almost all physical evidence of monsoonal activity. Reassessement of northern and central Australian terrestrial and marine sequences reveals the Cenozoic history of this monsoon. Evidence for a Paleogene Australian paleomonsoon is equivocal due to the small number of sites, their limited age control, and the poor preservation of flora with ambiguous affinities. Modeling and tectonic evidence suggest the northern part of the Australian Plate migrated to the (sub)tropical region (north of 30°S) creating "modern" boundary conditions for monsoonal onset by ~10 Ma. Cores off northwest Australia reveal arid late Miocene and humid Pliocene conditions were followed by the Pseudo-Monsoon at ~3.5 Ma when northern hemisphere glacial expansion "forced" the ITCZ (Inter Tropical Convergent Zone) south. Subsequently, variable humid and arid periods typify Quaternary high amplitude glacio-eustatic cycles until ~1 Ma, when arid conditions expanded across Australia. Glacial/interglacial cyclicity and obliquity/precession insolation during terminations modulated Pseudo-Monsoon intensity when the ITCZ migrated northwards during glacial and southwards during interglacial periods from ~1 Ma to present. From ~1 Ma to 1.6 Ma precession paced Pseudo-Monsoon variability. Mega-lake expansion in central Australia and fluvial intensification generally correspond to wetter interglacial periods. Lake Eyre monsoonal shorelines may have been influenced by abrupt millennial events. Monsoonal conditions re-established near the base of Holocene as the ITCZ migrated across northern Australia. The Australian Monsoon (sensu stricto) and Quasi-Monsoon initiated from 12.5 to 11 ka intensifying from 9 to 2 ka then weakened, possibly due to the onset of ENSO intensification. The Pseudo-Monsoon established at ~14.5 ka off northwest Australia intensifying from 11.5 ka to 7 ka. It weakened after ~7 ka north of 15°S and ~5 ka to the south. In the absence of a topographic influence, insolation (precession/obliquity), abrupt millennial events and/or ITCZ variability across northern Australia were important controls on Quaternary Australian monsoon intensity. Further investigations of deeper time pre-Quaternary records off northwest and northeast Australia will reveal the paleohistory of this important monsoonal domain of the Global Monsoon.