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Sunday, August 17, 2008 - 8:39 PM
A massive, earthquake-induced gash that cuts through eastern Africa
contains evidence of three rainy phases during the Stone Age. They
might have spurred the evolution of modern humanity's direct ancestors
as well as of many other mammal species, scientists suggest. Extended
intervals of heavy rains created deep lakes in several parts of eastern
Africa at times critical in human evolution, according to a team led by
geologist Martin H. Trauth of Potsdam (Germany) University. Ancient
lakes formed between 2.7 million and 2.5 million years ago, between 1.9
million and 1.7 million years ago, and finally between 1.1 million and
900,000 years ago, the scientists report in an upcoming Science. These watery eras correspond, respectively, to the times when the Homo genus originated, when the species Homo ergaster (sometimes called Homo erectus) first evolved, and when several ensuing Homo species debuted. The
periods of lake formation also roughly correspond to three pronounced
global shifts to a colder, drier climate that have been identified in
an independent analysis of dust layers in ocean-floor sediments. Trauth
and his coworkers propose that those climate transitions exerted a
different effect in parts of Africa, triggering periods of substantial
rainfall. The team examined previously dated soil layers in 10
rift basins located in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Tanzania. Sediment
containing large amounts of fossilized algae indicated an ancient lake.
Each site contained a large lake during one of the three ancient time
spans, the researchers say. In Trauth's view, evidence of
recurring rainy periods in Stone Age Africa supports the idea that
human ancestors and other animals evolved to deal with a merry-go-round
of novel environments spawned by frequent climate changes (SN: 7/12/97,
p. 26). The leading proponent of that view, anthropologist Richard
Potts of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., has dubbed
this controversial process variability selection. http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
"The new
findings indicate that East African lakes were created by monsoon rains
followed by periods of drought," Potts remarks. "But I think climate
change was more frequent than Trauth and his colleagues suggest it was." For
instance, Trauth's team suspects that eastern African lakes may often
have sprung up during roughly 20,000-year-long stretches of heavy
rainfall. At Olorgesailie, a Kenyan site where Potts has directed
research for the past 20 years, Trauth's team identified algae-laden
sediment from a lake that they conclude existed between 992,000 and
974,000 years ago.http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
However, a thin layer of white soil runs
through the middle of the algae-bearing Olorgesailie sediment layer,
Potts says. So, a drought emptied water from the lake for a period of
several hundred years, he argues.http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
Human ancestors didn't
necessarily respond to such changes via variability selection as Potts
theorizes, comments anthropologist Mark Collard of the University of
British Columbia in Vancouver. Human ancestors might have evolved
primarily in response to the global shift to a drier, cooler climate or
to climate-related changes in the population mix of animals inhabiting
eastern Africa, Collard says.
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