La Trobe

Historical dredge mining as a significant anthropomorphic agent in river systems: A case study from south-eastern Australia

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-28, 03:11 authored by Susan LawrenceSusan Lawrence, James Grove, Peter DaviesPeter Davies, Jodi TurnbullJodi Turnbull, I Rutherfurd, Mark MacklinMark Macklin

Bucket dredging to mine and extract gold and tin from rivers is a global industry that has had a range of negative effects on physical environments. These include the destruction of riparian soil profiles and structures, artificial channel straightening and loss of in-stream biodiversity. In this paper we evaluate the immediate effects and long-term consequences of bucket dredging on rivers in Victoria and New South Wales during the period 1900–1950. High quality historical sources on dredge mining are integrated with geospatial datasets, aerial imagery and geomorphological data to analyse the scale of the dredging industry, evidence for disturbance to river channels and floodplains and current land use in dredged areas. The study demonstrates that the environmental impact of dredging was altered but not reduced by anti-pollution regulations intended to control dredging. An assessment of river condition 70–100 years after dredge mining ceased indicates that floodplains and river channels continue to show the effects of dredging, including bank erosion, sediment slugs, compromised habitat and reduced agricultural productivity. These findings have significant implications for river and floodplain management.

Funding

This research was supported by funding from the Australian Research Council (DP160100799).

History

Publication Date

2021-07-01

Journal

The Holocene

Volume

31

Issue

7

Pagination

1158 - 1174

Publisher

Sage

ISSN

0959-6836

Rights Statement

© The Author(s) 2021. This is the Accepted Version. Reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses.

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