127 research outputs found

    Dynamics of Green Sahara Periods and Their Role in Hominin Evolution

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    Astronomically forced insolation changes have driven monsoon dynamics and recurrent humid episodes in North Africa, resulting in green Sahara Periods (GSPs) with savannah expansion throughout most of the desert. Despite their potential for expanding the area of prime hominin habitats and favouring out-of-Africa dispersals, GSPs have not been incorporated into the narrative of hominin evolution due to poor knowledge of their timing, dynamics and landscape composition at evolutionary timescales. We present a compilation of continental and marine paleoenvironmental records from within and around North Africa, which enables identification of over 230 GSPs within the last 8 million years. By combining the main climatological determinants of woody cover in tropical Africa with paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic data for representative (Holocene and Eemian) GSPs, we estimate precipitation regimes and habitat distributions during GSPs. Their chronology is consistent with the ages of Saharan archeological and fossil hominin sites. Each GSP took 2-3 kyr to develop, peaked over 4-8 kyr, biogeographically connected the African tropics to African and Eurasian mid latitudes, and ended within 2-3 kyr, which resulted in rapid habitat fragmentation. We argue that the well-dated succession of GSPs presented here may have played an important role in migration and evolution of hominins

    First paleomagnetic results of mid-to late Holocene sediments from Lake Issyk-Kul (Kyrgyzstan): Implications for paleosecular variation in central Asia

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    We present new paleomagnetic and rock magnetic data from mid and late Holocene sediments recovered in two gravity cores (C087 and C142a) from Lake Issyk-Kul (central Asia), for which independent radiocarbon-based age models are available. Our results indicate that sediments from core C087 are characterized by fine (pseudo single domain) magnetite grains and are reliable recorders of Holocene geomagnetic paleosecular variation (PSV) in central Asia, which is a region with poor data coverage. Similarity is found between the core C087 PSV record, which spans the last 5700 years, and the Lake Baikal PSV record, which is the only published Holocene central Asian PSV record of comparable length with an independent radiocarbon-based chronology. Our new results represent a step forward in constructing a reference PSV curve for central Asia that can be used to date sedimentary sequences. These results can also be used to improve the reliability and accuracy of global geomagnetic field models. We have not been able to disentangle past environmental changes in the Lake Issyk-Kul region based on rock magnetic properties, probably because the magnetite and hematite in the studied sediments have a mixed (fluvial and eolian) terrigenous origin. Copyright 2012 by the American Geophysical Union.Financial support for this research was provided through a CSIC JAE-Doc post-doctoral research contract (MGP), the GRACCIE (Spanish Consolider-Ingenio CSD2007-00067), APELIK (EU ICA2-CT-2000-10003), CGL2008-02203/BTE, and PALEONAO (CGL2010-15767/BTE) research projects.Peer Reviewe

    Magnetic properties of cherts from the basque-cantabrian basin and surrounding regions: Archeological implications

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    We present the first rock magnetic study of archeologically-relevant chert samples from the Basque-Cantabrian basin (BCB) and surrounding regions, which was conducted in order to test the usefulness of non-destructive magnetic properties for assessing chert quality, distinguishing source areas, and identifying heated samples in the archeological record. Our results indicate that the studied BCB cherts are diamagnetic and have very low amounts of magnetic minerals. The only exception is the chert of Artxilondo, which has a median positive magnetic susceptibility associated with larger concentrations of magnetic minerals. But even in this case, the magnetic susceptibility is within the lower range of other archeologically-relevant cherts elsewhere, which indicates that the studied BCB cherts can be considered as flint. The similar median values for all magnetic properties, along with their associated large interquartile ranges, indicates that rock magnetic methods are of limited use for sourcing different types of flint except in some specific contexts involving the Artxilondo flint. With regards to the identification of chert heating in the archeological record, our results indicate only a minor magnetic enhancement of BCB natural flint samples upon heating, which we attribute to the low amount of non-silica impurities. In any case, the diamagnetic behavior of most BCB natural flints, along with the local use only of the Artxilondo type, suggests that any flint tool within the core of the BCB with positive magnetic susceptibility values is likely to have been subjected to heating for improving its knapping properties. Further studies are necessary to better identify the type, origin and grain size of magnetic minerals in BCB natural flints, and to apply non-destructive magnetic properties to flint tools in order to identify the use of heat treatment in the BCB archeological record. © 2016 Larrasoaña, Beamud, Olivares, Murelaga, Tarriño, Baceta and Etxebarria.This study was funded by project GUI15/34 of the Universidad del País Vasco.Peer reviewe

    Pleistocene climate fluctuations drove demographic history of African golden wolves (Canis lupaster)

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    Pleistocene climate change impacted entire ecosystems throughout the world. In the northern hemisphere, the distribution of Arctic species expanded during glacial periods, while more temperate and mesic species contracted into climatic refugia, where isolation drove genetic divergence. Cycles of local cooling and warming in the Sahara region of northern Africa caused repeated contractions and expansions of savannah‐like environments which connected mesic species isolated in refugia during interglacial times, possibly driving population expansions and contractions; divergence and geneflow in the associated fauna. Here, we use whole genome sequences of African golden wolves (Canis lupaster), a generalist mesopredator with a wide distribution in northern Africa to estimate their demographic history and past episodes of geneflow. We detect a correlation between divergence times and cycles of increased aridity‐associated Pleistocene glacial cycles. A complex demographic history with responses to local climate change in different lineages was found, including a relict lineage north of the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco that has been isolated for more than 18,000 years, possibly a distinct ecotype.CS was supported by a PhD fellowship from Programa Internacional de Becas “La Caixa-Severo Ochoa” of the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and La Caixa bank (BES-2015-074331). This project was funded by the Frontera grant P18-FR-5099 from the Junta de Andalucia. EBD-CSIC received support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under the ‘Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa 2013-2017’ program, SEV-2012-0262

    Paleomagnetic and paleoenvironmental implications of magnetofossil occurrences in late Miocene marine sediments from the Guadalquivir Basin, SW Spain

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    Although recent studies have revealed more widespread occurrences of magnetofossils in pre-Quaternary sediments than have been previously reported, their significance for paleomagnetic and paleoenvironmental studies is not fully understood. We present a paleo- and rock-magnetic study of late Miocene marine sediments recovered from the Guadalquivir Basin (SW Spain). Well-defined paleomagnetic directions provide a robust magnetostratigraphic chronology for the two studied sediment cores. Rock magnetic results indicate the dominance of intact magnetosome chains throughout the studied sediments. These results provide a link between the highest-quality paleomagnetic directions and higher magnetofossil abundances. We interpret that bacterial magnetite formed in the surface sediment mixed layer and that these magnetic particles gave rise to a paleomagnetic signal in the same way as detrital grains. They, therefore, carry a magnetization that is essentially identical to a post-depositional remanent magnetization, which we term a bio-depositional remanent magnetization. Some studied polarity reversals record paleomagnetic directions with an apparent 60-70 kyr recording delay. Magnetofossils in these cases are interpreted to carry a biogeochemical remanent magnetization that is locked in at greater depth in the sediment column. A sharp decrease in magnetofossil abundance toward the middle of the studied boreholes coincides broadly with a major rise in sediment accumulation rates near the onset of the Messinian salinity crisis (MSC), an event caused by interruption of the connection between the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. This correlation appears to have resulted from dilution of magnetofossils by enhanced terrigenous inputs that were driven, in turn, by sedimentary changes triggered in the basin at the onset of the MSC. Our results highlight the importance of magnetofossils as carriers of high-quality paleomagnetic and paleoenvironmental signals even in dominantly terrigenous sediments.This study was funded by the Guadaltyc project (MINECO, CGL2012–30875), ARC grant DP120103952, and NSFC grant 41374073

    Mediterranean water in the Atlantic Iberian margin reveals early isolation events during the Messinian Salinity Crisis

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    Recent studies highlight the role of the Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW), in the intensification of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and as source of heat and salty water to high latitudes. During the Late Miocene the MOW suffered major changes and likely a total collapse during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). In order to study the MOW evolution in the Atlantic margin during the Tortonian-Messinian interval we completed a new high resolution geochemical and stable isotope record for the corresponding interval of the Montemayor-1 and Huelva-1 cores. Both sites are located in the Guadalquivir Basin on the former Atlantic side of the Mediterranean – Atlantic gateways (Iberian Atlantic margin) during the late Miocene. The tuning of this isotope record with astronomical solutions and other global isotope curves has allowed the establishment of an improved chronology and, consequently, to precisely date environmental changes happening on the Atlantic margin of the Iberian peninsula and their link to Mediterranean and global events. At 7.17 Ma, in concomitance with a shallowing of the basin, the residence time, temperature and salinity of the bottom waters increased. These changes were related to a reduction of the MOW reaching the Atlantic side as a consequence of the restriction of the last strand of the Betic corridor that connected the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. This hypothesis is in line with the analogous changes observed in several Mediterranean Sea locations, where from 7.17 Ma onward a reduced Mediterranean – Atlantic connection is observable. Furthermore, the new isotope chronology sheds light, through comparison with other records, on the age of Messinian geomagnetic reversals.</p

    Mediterranean water in the Atlantic Iberian margin reveals early isolation events during the Messinian Salinity Crisis

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    Recent studies highlight the role of the Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW), in the intensification of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and as source of heat and salty water to high latitudes. During the Late Miocene the MOW suffered major changes and likely a total collapse during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). In order to study the MOW evolution in the Atlantic margin during the Tortonian-Messinian interval we completed a new high resolution geochemical and stable isotope record for the corresponding interval of the Montemayor-1 and Huelva-1 cores. Both sites are located in the Guadalquivir Basin on the former Atlantic side of the Mediterranean – Atlantic gateways (Iberian Atlantic margin) during the late Miocene. The tuning of this isotope record with astronomical solutions and other global isotope curves has allowed the establishment of an improved chronology and, consequently, to precisely date environmental changes happening on the Atlantic margin of the Iberian peninsula and their link to Mediterranean and global events. At 7.17 Ma, in concomitance with a shallowing of the basin, the residence time, temperature and salinity of the bottom waters increased. These changes were related to a reduction of the MOW reaching the Atlantic side as a consequence of the restriction of the last strand of the Betic corridor that connected the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. This hypothesis is in line with the analogous changes observed in several Mediterranean Sea locations, where from 7.17 Ma onward a reduced Mediterranean – Atlantic connection is observable. Furthermore, the new isotope chronology sheds light, through comparison with other records, on the age of Messinian geomagnetic reversals.</p

    Source-to-sink magnetic properties of NE Saharan dust in Eastern Mediterranean marine sediments: review and paleoenvironmental implications

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    We present a review of the magnetic properties of NE Saharan dust that was conducted, following a source-to-sink approach, to unravel the paleoclimatic significance of environmental magnetic records from Eastern Mediterranean marine sediments. Our synthesis indicates that pedogenic hematite, which formed during past wetter Green Sahara periods (GSPs), is the most common magnetic mineral in Eastern Mediterranean marine sediments as a result of its eolian transportation, along with smaller amounts of lithogenic hematite, from the NE Sahara. Coupled with the limited impact of reductive sedimentary diagenesis on hematite abundances in Eastern Mediterranean Sea sediments, this indicates that hematite concentrations provide reliable quantitative estimates of NE Saharan dust supply. Our results indicate that variations in NE Saharan dust supply record an on-off mechanism in which a key control on eolian input is provided by the monsoon-driven spread and retreat of savannah vegetation through the Sahara. Magnetite/maghemite is also a common magnetic mineral in NE Saharan dust, and also formed mainly pedogenically during GSPs but in much smaller amounts compared to hematite. Limited production of magnetite/maghemite in the source area during GSPs, along with the later imprint of diagenetic processes, indicates that magnetite/maghemite abundances cannot be used to estimate dust inputs from the NE Sahara. Goethite cannot be used either to estimate variations in NE Saharan dust supply, because its occurrence in Eastern Mediterranean marine sediments also appears to be linked to fluvial inputs. Our results reinforce the view that a source-to-sink approach should be routinely conducted in environmental magnetic studies to understand the complex combination of processes involved in the production, transportation, sedimentation, and diagenetic evolution of magnetic minerals in sedimentary environments. © 2015 Larrasoaña, Roberts, Liu, Lyons, Oldfield, Rohling and Heslop.A Rand D H gratefully acknowledge support from Australian Research Council grant DP110105419 , and ER acknowledges support from 2012 Australia Laureate Fellowship FL120100050.Peer reviewe

    Petrological characterization of flint from Montmaneu's Limestones Formation (Eastern sector of the Ebro Basin)

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    [EN] Flint from Montmaneu's Limestones Formation of Rupelian age (Oligocene) is being here characterized. The analysis of the compositional texture, mineralogy and geochemical features has revealed this flint is highly pure and of microcrystalline texture, with a significant content of moganite. This flint is product of an early diagenetic replacement of limestone from littoral lacustrine facies. This flint was exploited by human populations in a regional range, especially in the early stages of the Neolithic.[ES] Se caracteriza el sílex de la Formación calizas de Montmaneu, de edad Rupeliense (Oligoceno). El análisis textural, mineralógico y de sus rasgos geoquímicos indica que se trata de un sílex microcristalino, bastante puro, con una proporción significativa de moganita. Es producto del reemplazamiento diagenético temprano de calizas de facies lacustres litorales. Este sílex fue objeto de una explotación regional, especialmente en los primeros momentos del Neolítico.Este trabajo forma parte del proyecto de constitución de una litoteca de rocas silíceas del NE peninsular (LITOcat). Los estudios sobre la explotación prehistórica del sílex de Montmaneu se llevan a cabo en el marco del proyecto "Aprofitament prehistòric i històric del sílex a Catalunya: contextos extractius i de primera transformació". Ambos proyectos son financiados por el CSIC-IMF y el Departamento de Cultura de la Generalitat de Catalunya.Peer reviewe
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