Abstract

The Turkana Basin in NW Kenya and SW Ethiopia hosts remarkable fossil-rich sediments that are central to our understanding of early hominin evolution, with interbedded volcanic tuffs providing critical time markers. However, the resolution of existing Early Pleistocene–Pliocene ages is limited to c. 20–60 kyr, inhibiting the evaluation of climatic and environmental drivers of evolution. We present high-precision, single-feldspar 40 Ar/ 39 Ar age and elemental data for four stratigraphically significant tuffs. These samples exhibit variably dispersed age distributions correlated with feldspar compositional trends, interpreted to indicate the partial retention of inherited 40 Ar related to crustal ‘cold storage’ and rapid melt infiltration preceding eruption. We evaluated various statistical methods and calculated astronomically calibrated Bayesian age estimates of 1879.1 ± 0.6 ka (±2.4 ka including external errors) for the Kay Behrensmeyer Site (KBS)/H2 Tuff, 1837.4 ± 0.9 ka (±2.4 ka) for the Malbe/H4 Tuff, 1357.5 ± 1.8 ka (±2.5 ka) for the Chari/L Tuff and 1315.4 ± 1.9 ka (±2.5 ka) for the Gele Tuff. Our results permit refined age constraints for important early Homo fossils, including the cranium KNM-ER1813 ( Homo habilis ) and various Homo erectus fossils. The KBS Tuff age also provides an important calibration locus for orbital tuning of palaeoclimate proxy records, revealing the complex interplays between palaeoclimate and geological drivers of sedimentation. Supplementary material : The supplementary tables and figures include previously published ages (Table S1), sample and irradiation information (Table S2), electron probe microanalytical results for tuff glasses (Table S3, Figs S2 and S3) and feldspars (Table S4), 40 Ar/ 39 Ar analytical data (Tables S5 and S6, Fig. S4), orbital tuning model parameters (Table S7), a summary of previous and revised hominin ages (Table S8) and a worked Bayesian estimation example (Fig. S1) and are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6602994

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