Before human arrival approximately 65,000–70,000 years ago, Australia had already been shaped by hundreds of millions of years of unique geological, biological, and climatic processes. Understanding this baseline is essential for appreciating how human presence has since transformed the continent’s outdoor environments.
Australia separated from the supercontinent Gondwana approximately 45–50 million years ago, drifting northward toward its current position. This prolonged isolation produced evolutionary trajectories found nowhere else on Earth.
Key consequences of biological isolation:
| Taxon | Example Species | Status Before Humans |
|---|---|---|
| Marsupials | Diprotodon optatum | Thriving |
| Monotremes | Platypus | Thriving |
| Reptiles | Megalania prisca | Thriving |
| Birds | Genyornis newtoni (mihirung) | Thriving |
KEY TAKEAWAY: Australia’s biological isolation produced the world’s highest proportion of endemic species — species found nowhere else. This uniqueness makes Australian environments especially vulnerable to introduced species and habitat loss.
Australia sits on the Indo-Australian tectonic plate, one of Earth’s oldest and most geologically stable continental cradles. Unlike tectonically active regions, Australia has experienced minimal volcanic activity and no major orogenic (mountain-building) events for hundreds of millions of years.
Consequences of geological stability:
EXAM TIP: Questions often ask you to explain how geological stability shapes Australia’s environment. Link nutrient-poor soils → unique plant adaptations (e.g., proteoid roots, carnivorous plants) → specialised animal communities.
Australia’s climate is defined by variability — driven by its size, position straddling tropical and temperate zones, and the influence of major oceanic and atmospheric systems.
Key climatic drivers:
Climate zones (pre-human):
| Zone | Location | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Tropical | N. Australia | Wet/dry seasons, monsoonal |
| Arid/Semi-arid | Central Australia | <250 mm rain/yr, extreme heat |
| Mediterranean | SW & S. Australia | Hot dry summers, cool wet winters |
| Temperate | SE Australia & Tasmania | Year-round rainfall, cooler temps |
| Alpine | Snowy Mountains, Victorian Alps | Snow, frost, short growing season |
Fire as a natural process:
Lightning-ignited fires have shaped Australian vegetation for at least 60 million years. Many native plants evolved fire-adaptive traits:
- Thick bark (eucalypts)
- Lignotubers (underground regeneration structures)
- Serotinous seed pods requiring heat to open (banksias, hakeas)
- Epicormic buds (shoots emerging from trunk after fire)
VCAA FOCUS: The study design specifically calls for understanding climatic variations. Be able to describe at least three climate zones and explain how ENSO variability shaped pre-human Australia’s ecosystems.
| Feature | Key Characteristic | Ecological Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Biological isolation | 45–50 Ma separation from Gondwana | >80% endemic species; marsupial dominance |
| Geological stability | Ancient, flat, weathered | Nutrient-poor soils; specialised flora |
| Climatic variation | ENSO cycles; multiple climate zones | Fire-adapted ecosystems; drought resilience |
COMMON MISTAKE: Students often confuse biological isolation with geographic isolation alone. Isolation was also biochemical and ecological — the nutrient-poor soils and fire regimes reinforced unique evolutionary pressures independent of just being separated from other landmasses.