Journal article
Human impacts on suspended sediment and turbidity in the River Murray, South Eastern Australia: Multiple lines of evidence
ID Rutherfurd, C Kenyon, M Thoms, J Grove, J Turnbull, P Davies, S Lawrence
River Research and Applications | WILEY | Published : 2020
DOI: 10.1002/rra.3566
Abstract
European settlement has led to increased loads of fine suspended sediment (SS) entering the River Murray, Australia's largest, and arguably, most important river. The River Murray's anthropogenic sediment history can be divided into four periods with varying source areas, sediment loads, and seasonal patterns. The Aboriginal period (before 1840) was characterized by clear water at summer low-flows in the River Murray and its southern tributaries, with more sediment coming from the northern catchment than the southern, and the Darling River being turbid at all flows. There is little evidence that Aboriginal burning resulted in any measurable increase in SS. SS loads peaked in the 1870s and 18..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
Australian Research Council Grant, Grant/Award Number: DP160100799