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Climate
change/culture change: a meditation on Lake Mungo
by Merrill Findlay,
for Habitat
Australia, October 1990
The
sun reaches across the darkness of space to our ancient
dune, illumes it grain by grain in golden light. Our breath
hangs condensed in this Mungo dawn: three women, my two
friends and me, and the ghost of a fourth who lived, died
and was buried here perhaps thirty thousand years ago.
She too watched this same scatter of sunlight, this same
early morning alchemy. We read her life but darkly from
the only text we have: this now semi-arid crescent dune
which was once the eastern rim of a great freshwater lake.
The
Walls of China, Lake Mungo. Photo by Merrill Findlay,
1990.
Mungo
Lady, as archaeologists renamed her, was born-again just
twenty years ago when geomorphologist Jim Bowler noticed
her cremated, carbonate-encrusted bones eroding from what
had been the dune core. At that time white Australians
still believed human beings had occupied Australia for
less than 20,000 years: Mungo Lady, a gracile and modern
young woman, forced us to reconstruct our academic myths
about the peopling of this continent and the ancient migration
patterns of our species.
We
can't put flesh to her bones nor words to her lips. We
can't see the world as she saw it, nor even guess what
metaphors she used to explain it. But Mungo Lady whispers
to us yet from this Pleistocene dune that is now known
as the Walls of China. Signs of her passing are scattered
across this landscape like the yarrow of the I Ching as
we break the silence of the millennia with speculation
about who she was, what she ate, how she lived, whom she
lived with, and what this great once-brimming inland lake
meant to her and to her people. Archaeologists can interpret
much from the stone tools and refuse her people left behind,
from the way her clan ritually cremated her and buried
her remains, and from even the most tenuous hints laid
down by time and preserved by happenstance in the earth
beneath us.
The
story so far is that this lady lived a soft life, a life
of high culture, of plenty. She camped seasonally with
her clan on a sandy beach by this lake which was filled
then with shell fish, golden perch, yabbies and murray
cod, and surrounded by temperate woodlands rich in all
the resources necessary to sustain a small hunter/gather
population in affluence and comfort.
The
lake bed from the eroded lunette after rain. Photo by
Merrill Findlay, 1990.
Now,
thirty thousand years of climate change later, saltbush
has colonised the lake floor. By the fossil shore, just
a few stunted bellahs. Beyond the eroded lunette, mallee
as far as the eye can see. Water has not flowed into Lake
Mungo for five hundred generations.
The
sun soars towards noon as we sit on this dune and watch.
Earth pirouettes, dances her eternal orbit. The day passes.
The millennia. Each planetary oscillation, each tilt and
wobble, alters our energy budget. These cosmic cycles
are etched into the very ground we tread. Each stratum
of this dune speaks of climate change.
At
the base of the Walls of China, a red wind-blown deposit
describes the filling of the lake 50,000 years ago after
a long Dry. It tells of water pumped from the oceans by
the sun, falling as rain in the eastern highlands, draining
into the Lachlan River and Willandra Creek to keep Mungo
full for 14,000 years. Another tilt, another stumble in
earth's cosmic pas de deux, and Mungo's water budget
shifted to deficit once more. The lake dried. Pale clay
from the lake floor blew onto the dune to testify.
About
32,000 years ago, earth quivered again in her eternal
spin. Again the climate changed. More rain fell. Mungo
was replenished and remained full for another 7,000 years.
These were the lake's Halcyon days; Mungo Lady's days
of affluence and plenty on a sandy shore. But then began
the slide into the last great Ice Age. Another cosmic
tantrum, another shift in earth's absorption of solar
radiation, another global drop in mean temperature. Ice
sheets kilometers thick crept over northern Europe and
Canada. In the south, packs of ice reached to within a
few hundred ks of Tasmania. Glaciers formed. The oceans
cooled. Atmospheric temperature gradients constricted.
Pressure systems intensified. Wind patterns changed. Sea
levels dropped. You could walk from Hobart to Port Moresby.
By
16,500 years ago, Lake Mungo was dry. The surrounding
landscape, once lush, had become a desert wrapped in clouds
of swirling red Parna dust. Hot windy summers, cold frosty
winters, reduced growing seasons, high evaporation, little
precipitation. Willandra Creek no longer flowed. The lake
bed died slowly. A wreath of salt from the water table
rose to the muddy surface to flower as white crystals.
As the blooms released their water molecules to the air,
they collapsed into fine powder and prepared the clay
and sand of the lake bed to be scraped and hurled against
the flanks of the dunes by the glacial south-westerlies.
That clay and sand remains as an eroding grey blanket;
a lesson to us all about salinity, land degradation, climate
change.
storm
over Mungo. Photo by Merrill Findlay, 1990.
Only
a winter breeze laps now at Mungo's shore. It skims the
sand, exposes stone flakes, long cold embers, ancient
fires. Tribal memory. Technology.
Fire
and the silcrete chip quarried from the lake shore were
the basic tools Mungo Lady's people used to manipulate
the environment. This technology was not benign, but in
the hands of a small population moving seasonally across
the landscape, its impact was sustainable. As the climate
changed, so did the culture. People adapted. They developed
new technologies to exploit new resources and survived.
The last two hundred years have been their greatest challenge.
For
all of us, for the planet itself, these last two centuries
have been the deepest frown across the face of the millennia.
In this brief time my tribe has become a life threatening
agent of global change. Our fires have burned too brightly.
Our technology has scarred too deeply. Our culture has
alienated itself from the very source of its nourishment.
We
have not, however, lost completely the wisdom we inherited.
Daily we construct new, more appropriate visions of our
future. Mungo Lady's silcrete chip is now a memory of
times past. The technologies that displaced it -- the
coal and oil fired furnaces, the internal combustion engines,
the nuclear weapons -- will themselves become relics,
along with the old concepts they were part of. And in
our post-industrial silicon chip, perhaps we have a technology
with hope. Only the millennia will tell. The story of our
future, like that of our past, will be etched into the
earth we tread.
Thousands
of years of erosion at Mungo. Photo by Merrill Findlay,
1990 .
We
perch tenuously together on this dune at the end of what
my people naively call the twentieth century. Through
whatever filters we glimpse the view - the laws of thermodynamics,
systems theory, cybernetics, Chaos, deep ecology, Gaia
- we are no longer at the apex of creation where our old
myths once placed us: we're just part of the whole. The
past, the present and the future camp here beside us.
Our
planet, with our sun, continues its tipsy dance through
the universe: each tilt, each flare, each flutter of a
butterfly wing, each blink of a star we feel, though we
may not perceive the effect directly. These events are
beyond our control: all we can do is adapt to their consequences.
Not so the impact of our way of life, our culture, on
our biosphere. That we can change, and must, lest the
long term adaptations we will have to make are unmakable.
So
- we sit here, you and I, and stare the sun in the eye.
Dark violet storm clouds hug the distance: the sun catches
their underbellies, showers them with gold, deep rose.
A lone peewit flies across the glow. A plover calls her
mate. Behind us the sky turns Chinese porcelain as we
wait for Venus and sip our wine. To the future. To culture
change. To Mungo Lady. To us.
©
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revised March 2004, and again 5 January 2005. This page created 21 January 2008. |
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