Abstract

Establishing robust environmental proxies at newly investigated terrestrial sedimentary archives is a challenge, because straightforward climate reconstructions can be hampered by the complex relationship between climate parameters and sediment composition, proxy preservation or (in)sufficient sample material. We present a minimally invasive hyperspectral bidirectional reflectance analysis on discrete samples in the wavelength range from 0.25 to 17 µm on 35 lacustrine sediment core samples from the Chew Bahir Basin, southern Ethiopia for climate proxy studies. We identified and used absorption bands at 2.2 μm (Al–OH), at 2.3 μm (Mg–OH), at 1.16 μm (analcime), and at 3.98 μm (calcite) for quantitative spectral analysis. The band depth ratios at 2.3/2.2 μm in the spectra correlate with variations in the potassium content of the sediment samples, which also reflect periods of increased Al-to-Mg substitution in clay minerals during drier climatic episodes. During these episodes of drier conditions, absorption bands diagnostic of the presence of analcime and calcite support this interpretation, with analcime indicating the driest conditions. These results could be compared to qualitative analysis of other characteristic spectral properties in the spectral range between 0.25 and 17 µm. The results of the hyperspectral measurements complement previous sedimentological and geochemical analyses, allowing us in particular to resolve more finely the processes of weathering in the catchment and low-temperature authigenic processes in the sediment. This enables us to better understand environmental changes in the habitat of early humans.

Highlights

  • Reliable and precise climate indicators are essential for reconstructing paleoenvironmental conditions from sedimentary archives

  • This paper reports the results of a study that applied advanced hyperspectral analysis to support the non-destructive study of Chew Bahir (CHB) sediment core samples

  • We examine the relationship between the derived mineralogical and geochemical properties of selected samples to test their linkage to the hydroclimate history of the CHB region

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Summary

Introduction

Reliable and precise climate indicators (proxies) are essential for reconstructing paleoenvironmental conditions from sedimentary archives. As a contribution toward an enhanced understanding of humanclimate interactions, the Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) has cored five fluvio-lacustrine archives covering the last ∼3.5 Ma of climate change in eastern Africa. The ∼620 ka Chew Bahir record covers recent phases of hominin evolution, a time interval marked by intense climatic changes and including milestones, such as, the transition from the Acheulean to the Middle Stone Age and the emergence of archaic and modern H. sapiens in Africa, as well as the dispersal of this species (e.g., Stringer, 2016; Stringer and Galway-Witham, 2017; Roberts et al, submitted)

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