During the Last Glacial Maximum, ice sheets covered large areas in northern
latitudes and global temperatures were significantly lower than today. But
few direct estimates exist of the volume of the ice sheets, or the timing
and rates of change during their advance and retreat(1,2). Here we analyse
four distinct sediment facies in the shallow, tectonically stable Bonaparte
Gulf, Australia-each of which is characteristic of a distinct range in sea
level-to estimate the maximum volume of land-based ice during the last gla
ciation and the timing of the initial melting phase. We use faunal assembla
ges and preservation status of the sediments to distinguish open marine, sh
allow marine, marginal marine and brackish conditions, and estimate the tim
ing and the mass of the ice sheets using radiocarbon dating and glacio-hydr
oisostatic modelling. Our results indicate that from at least 22,000 to 19,
000 (calendar) years before present, land-based ice volume was at its maxim
um, exceeding today's grounded ice sheets by 52.5 x 10(6) km(3). A rapid de
crease in ice volume by about 10% within a few hundred years terminated the
Last Glacial Maximum at 19; 000 +/- 250 years.