PhD: Palaeohydrology, climatic variability and water-use strategies in Australia from the late Pleistocene to the present

King's College London

London, UK 🇬🇧

Project Description

As the driest inhabited continent, Australia has always been a challenging home for humans, with lifeways heavily shaped by the availability of water. This has affected the dispersal of Homo sapiens into the continent.

The project will explore how past climate fluctuations in the Australian desert influenced our species arrival in Australia and its occupations throughout the late Pleistocene and Holocene. The student will couple remote sensing and GIS techniques to map paleohydrology with analyses of climate proxy and model data to produce new frameworks for the changing distribution of water across the continent over time. The student will contextualise these findings with archaeological data from the literature and information from partnerships with archaeologists and Indigenous communities to assess human occupations, subsistence strategies and ‘water-tethering’ over time, as well as to explore the implications of the findings for future water scenarios in Australia. 

An important aspect of the project will be archaeological survey of key sites identified by the study, and community engagement and discussions with Indigenous Elders concerning past water sourcing and management strategies, as well as the effects of colonial water management. This project forms part of a wider cross-disciplinary Australian Anthropocene initiative together with the Universities of Griffith, Queensland, and Sydney, and the Max Planck institute for Geoanthropology.

Research themes

Past Life & Environments

Project Specific Training

The supervisors will provide training in remote sensing and GIS skills via one to one meetings and auditing of modules focused on these topics in the host department. Training will be provided in the field by the project team.

Potential Career Trajectory

The project will provide transferable skills in remote sensing and GIS skills which are widely applied skill sets that open up a diverse array of careers in both academia and industry.

Project supervisor/s, Nick Drake, Geography, KCL, nick.drake@kcl.ac.uk, https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/nick-drake

Paul Breeze, Geography, KCL, paul.s.breeze@kcl.ac.uk, https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/paul-breeze

Supervision balance: 50:50

6 days remaining

Apply by 17 December, 2025

POSITION TYPE

ORGANIZATION TYPE

EXPERIENCE-LEVEL

DEGREE REQUIRED

IHE Delft - MSc in Water and Sustainable Development