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Recurrent spring‐fed rivers in a Middle to Late Pleistocene semi‐arid grassland: Implications for environments of early humans in the Lake Victoria Basin,Kenya
Authors:Emily J Beverly  Steven G Driese  Daniel J Peppe  Cara R Johnson  Lauren A Michel  J Tyler Faith  Christian A Tryon  Warren D Sharp
Institution:1. Terrestrial Paleoclimatology Research Group, Department of Geology, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA;2. Department of Anthropology, U‐2176, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA;3. Perot Museum of Nature and Science, Dallas, TX, USA;4. School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia;5. Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, Peabody Museum, Cambridge, MA, USA;6. Berkeley Geochronology Center, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract:The effect of changing palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironment on human evolution during the Pleistocene is debated, but hampered by few East African records directly associated with archaeological sites prior to the Last Glacial Maximum. Middle to Late Pleistocene deposits on the shoreline of eastern Lake Victoria preserve abundant vertebrate fossils and Middle Stone Age arte‐facts associated with riverine tufas at the base of the deposits, which are ideal for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. New data from tufas identified on Rusinga Island and on the mainland near Karungu, Kenya are provided from outcrop, thin sections, mineralogical, stable isotopic and U‐series dating analyses. Tufa is identified in four sites: Nyamita (94·0 ± 3·3 and 111·4 ± 4·2 ka); Kisaaka, Aringo (455 ± 45 ka); and Obware. The age ranges of these tufa deposits demonstrate that spring‐fed rivers were a recurrent, variably preserved feature on the Pleistocene landscape for ca 360 kyr. Poor sorting of clastic facies from all sites indicates flashy, ephemeral discharge, but these facies are commonly associated with barrage tufas, paludal environments with δ13C values of ca 10‰ indicative of C3 plants and fossil Hippopotamus, all of which indicate a perennial water source. Other tufa deposits from Nyamita, Obware and Aringo have a mixed C3/C4 signature consistent with a semi‐arid C4 grassland surrounding these spring‐fed rivers. The δ18O values of tufa from Nyamita are on average ca 1‰ more negative than calcite precipitated from modern rainfall in the region, suggesting greater contribution of depleted monsoonal input, similar to the Last Glacial Maximum. Microdebitage and surface‐collected artefacts indicate that early modern humans were utilizing these spring‐fed rivers. The presence of spring?fed rivers would have afforded animals a reliable water source, sustaining a diverse plant and animal community in an otherwise arid environment.
Keywords:East Africa  human evolution  Karungu  Lake Victoria  Middle to Late Pleistocene  riverine tufa  Rusinga Island  semi‐arid environments
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