Research Grant
[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP150100264]Researchers: Gavin John Prideaux (Chief Investigator) , Gavin John Prideaux (Chief Investigator) , Dr Mark Hutchinson (Partner Investigator)
Brief description Faunal responses to past climatic and human impacts in eastern Australia. The Wellington Caves in central eastern New South Wales are Australia's most historically significant fossil locality and preserve one of the world's most complete records of vertebrate life spanning the past 4 million years. To date this unique archive has been vastly under-exploited as a source of information on how faunas respond to increased aridity and climatic variability, as well as human activities over the past 50 000 years. This project aims to elucidate how climate change drove the evolution of the modern fauna of eastern Australia by analysing changes in diversity, diet and community structure over time. It may also help break the 130-year climate-versus-humans deadlock over what drove the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions.
Funding Amount $295,900
Funding Scheme Discovery Projects
- PURL : https://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP150100264
- ARC : DP150100264