Abstract

Trinil (Java, Indonesia) yielded the type fossils of Homo erectus and the world’s oldest hominin-made engraving. As such, the site is of iconic relevance for paleoanthropology. However, our understanding of its larger geological context is unsatisfactory. Previous sedimentological studies are around 100 years old and their interpretations sometimes contradictory. Moreover, the existing stratigraphic framework is based on regional correlations, which obscure differences in local depositional dynamics. Therefore, a new and more local framework is urgently needed. We carried out a comprehensive geological study of the Trinil area. Using a Digital Elevation Model, we identified seven fluvial terraces. Terrace deposits were described and OSL-dated and fluvial behaviour was reconstructed. The terraces were correlated with terraces of the Kendeng Hills (e.g. the hominin-bearing Ngandong terrace) and date back to the past ∼350 ka. Thus far, most of the Trinil terraces and their deposits had remained unidentified, confounding sedimentological and stratigraphic interpretations. The exposed pre-terrace series has a thickness of ∼230 m. Together with the terraces, it forms a ∼3 Ma record of tectonism, volcanism, climate change and sea-level fluctuations. We subdivided the series into five new and/or revised stratigraphic units, representing different depositional environments: Kalibeng Formation, Padas Malang Formation, Batu Gajah Formation, Trinil Formation and Solo Formation. Special attention was paid to erosional contacts and weathering profiles, forming hiatuses in the depositional series, and offering insight into paleoclimate and base-level change. The Trinil Formation provides a new landscape context of Homo erectus. Between ∼550 and 350 ka, the area was part of a lake basin (Ngawi Lake Basin), separated from the marine base level by a volcanic barrier, under dry, seasonal conditions and a regular supply of volcanic ash. An expanding and retreating lake provided favourable living conditions for hominin populations. After 350 ka, this role was taken over by the perennial Solo River. Landscape reconstructions suggest that the Solo formed by headward erosion and stream piracy, re-connecting the Ngawi Lake Basin to the plains in the west. Our study offers a local framework, but its Pleistocene landscape record has regional significance. Most of all, it forms a much-needed basis for future, detailed studies on the build-up of the hominin site of Trinil, its fossil assemblages and numerical ages.

Highlights

  • Trinil (East Java, Indonesia, Fig. 1) is the discovery site of the world’s first deliberately sought fossils of a transitional form between apes and humans (Dubois, 1894a)

  • Duyfjes (1936, 1938) introduced a regional stratigraphy that is still in use today (e.g. Zaim, 2010; Joordens et al, 2015; Puspaningrum et al, 2020). This framework does not take into account the dynamic development of emerging Java, under the influence of volcanism, tectonism and sea-level fluctuations, with great differences in depositional environments across relatively short distances

  • Our study aims to establish a comprehensive sedimentological, stratigraphic and geochronological framework for the sediments exposed in Trinil and surroundings

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Summary

Introduction

Trinil (East Java, Indonesia, Fig. 1) is the discovery site of the world’s first deliberately sought fossils of a transitional form between apes and humans (Dubois, 1894a). Despite the importance of Trinil for faunal (including hominin) evolution, our understanding of the local geology is still based on over 100 years old sedimentological studies, often with contradictory interpretations (e.g. Dubois, 1908; Carthaus, 1911). Duyfjes’ regional stratigraphic units are partly based on correlations between outcrops, combining strata with different facies in one unit, which deprives us of a detailed insight into local depositional processes and ages. This unsatisfactory state of the art hampers understanding of the geology in the Trinil area and confirms that a local approach is urgently needed. This will be addressed in a separate paper (Hilgen et al in prep.)

Background
Previous work on sedimentology and stratigraphy
Duyfjes’ regional stratigraphy
Discovery of fluvial terraces
Field study
The terrace landscape of Trinil
Sedimentology of T4 and T3
Sedimentology of T2
The T2-scour over harder substrates
Sedimentology of T1
OSL dating of the terrace deposits
Correlation between the Trinil and Kendeng terrace sequences
Sedimentology of the pre-terrace substrate
The Padas Malang Section
The Batu Gajah Section
The Sogen Section
The Kali Soko section
Stratigraphic revision
Former practice
Trinil Member 3
Cross-sections and mapping
Age framework
Tectonism
Volcanism
Sea-level fluctuations
Climate
Middle Pleistocene isolation: the Ngawi lake basin
A new model for the development of the Solo
Conclusions
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