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Ancient Aboriginal Stories May Preserve 10,000-Year-Old Climate History

By Cameron Brooks · Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Finn's Take· TL;DR
  • Aboriginal Australian oral traditions may preserve accurate accounts of sea level rise 10,000 years ago at the end of the last Ice Age.
  • Stories from 21 coastal Aboriginal communities describe drowned lands matching geological evidence of post-glacial flooding between 7,000 and 13,000 years ago.
  • Without written language, Aboriginal cultures maintained story accuracy across 400 generations through isolation and the Dreaming tradition, challenging assumptions about oral memory limits.
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The Oldest Stories on Earth

What if the oldest surviving stories in human history aren't written in ancient texts, but have been passed down through thousands of years of Aboriginal oral tradition? Two researchers have argued that some Aboriginal Australian stories may be accurate memories of real events, the drowning of the old coastline as the seas rose at the end of the last Ice Age, between roughly 7,000 and 13,000 years ago. If they are right, these would be among the oldest reliably dated oral traditions anywhere on Earth.

Around almost the entire Australian coast, Aboriginal communities have told stories of a time when the sea came inland and swallowed country that people had walked on, hunted across and named. Prof. Patrick Nunn of the University of the Sunshine Coast and Dr Nick Reid of the University of New England analyzed Aboriginal stories from 21 places around Australia's coastline, each describing a time when sea levels were significantly lower than today.

"It's quite gobsmacking to think that a story could be told for 10,000 years," Nicholas Reid, a linguist specializing in Aboriginal Australian languages at Australia's University of New England, told researchers. "It's almost unimaginable that people would transmit stories about things like islands that are currently underwater accurately across 400 generations."

Stories Match Scientific Evidence

Several decades ago, linguists working with Aboriginal groups along the Queensland coastal margin recorded stories about a time when the ancestors of these people lived at the coast "where the Great Barrier Reef now stands". One version of the story collected from the Yidindji people of the Cairns area recalls a time when Fitzroy Island was part of the mainland and offshore Green Island was four times larger.

Around Australia, we know that at the coldest time of the last ice age about 20,000 years ago, sea level stood about 120 metres below its present level. By about 13,000 years ago, sea level had risen to around 70 metres below its present level. One thousand years later, it had risen to about 50 metres below present. The sea did rush in—at the end of the last glacial period—about 7,500 to 8,900 years ago.

It's so shallow that 10,000 years ago, when ice sheets and glaciers held far more of the planet's water than is the case today, most of the bay floor was high and dry and grazed upon by kangaroos. These scientific findings align remarkably well with the Aboriginal accounts of vast land areas that once existed where ocean now lies.

Survival Through Tradition

Without a written language, Australian tribes relied on oral storytelling to keep their identity — it is part of the collection of knowledge, practices and faith referred to as The Dreaming. "For almost 70,000 years the continent and the people living here were essentially isolated. With almost no outside groups to dilute them, Australia had close to the best conditions for keeping these stories alive," Professor Nunn said.

"These stories talk about a time when the sea started to come in and cover the land, and the changes this brought about to the way people lived – the changes in landscape, the ecosystem and the disruption this caused to their society." The consistency of these narratives across such vast distances and time periods suggests a remarkable fidelity in oral transmission.

Implications for Human Memory

This research challenges our understanding of how long human societies can preserve accurate historical information without written records. The obvious objection is that no story could survive intact for 300 or 400 generations. Yet the evidence suggests otherwise, opening new possibilities for understanding ancient climate events and human adaptation.

These findings could revolutionize how we study prehistoric climate change and human migration patterns. If Aboriginal stories can accurately preserve environmental details across millennia, they may hold keys to understanding other ancient climate events and their impacts on human societies worldwide. The research suggests that oral traditions, long dismissed by some scholars as unreliable, may actually be among our most valuable historical archives.

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