Abstract

The Turkana Basin in northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia has yielded hundreds of hominin fossils and is among the most important localities in the world for studying human origins. High resolution climate and vegetation reconstructions from this region can elucidate potential linkages between hominin evolution and environmental change. Microcharcoal and phytoliths were examined from a 216 m (1.87–1.38 Ma) drill core (WTK13), which targeted paleo-Lake Lorenyang sediments from the Nachukui Formation of the Turkana Basin. A total of 287 samples were analyzed at ∼32–96 cm intervals, providing millennial-scale temporal resolution. To better understand how basin sediments record fire and vegetation from the watershed, the paleorecord was compared with nine modern sediment samples collected from Lake Turkana along a transect of increasing distance from the 1978 to 1979 shoreline. This included vegetation surveys and phytolith production data for species from areas proximal to the basin. We found that phytolith and microcharcoal concentrations decreased predictably moving off shore. However, phytoliths from plants sourced in the Ethiopian Highlands increased moving off shore, likely the result of increased exposure to the Omo River sediment plume. In our down-core study, microcharcoal was well-preserved but phytolith preservation was poor below ∼60 m (∼1.50 Ma). Spectral analysis revealed that microcharcoal often varied at precessional (∼21 kyr) periodicities, and through a correlation with δDwax, linked orbitally forced peaks in precipitation with elevated fire on the landscape. Phytoliths revealed that alternating mesic C4 versus xeric C4 grass dominance likely varied at precessional periodicities as well, but that grass community composition was also mediated by basin geometry. Two high eccentricity intervals of particularly high amplitude and abrupt environmental change were centered at ∼1.72 and 1.50 Ma, with the intervening period experiencing high fire variability. With the switch from lacustrine to fluvial-deltaic deposition at the core site by 1.5 Ma, mesic C4 grasses dominated and fire activity was high. This upper interval correlated to the time interval from which Nariokotome Boy (Homo erectus/ergaster) was discovered 3 km east of our drill site. Phytoliths indicated a seasonally wet and open landscape dominated by xeric C4 grasses, sedges, and other herbaceous plants.

Highlights

  • The Turkana Basin in northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia is among the most important localities in the world for studying human origins

  • A total of 80 grass species from 38 genera occurred within the modern West Turkana (WTK), Lower Omo River Valley (LOR), and East Turkana (ETK) floristic areas (Supplementary Table S1)

  • Because that option was not available, we used a proxy approach based on species lists from local floristic surveys in concert with phytolith composition data for those species to determine a potential grass silica short-cell (GSSC) phytoscape signal for portions of the watershed closest to the modern lake

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Summary

Introduction

The Turkana Basin in northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia is among the most important localities in the world for studying human origins. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) targeted Early Pleistocene sediments from paleo-Lake Lorenyang (HSPDPWTK13-1A drill core; hereafter WTK13), a precursor to present-day Lake Turkana, to reconstruct regional climate and vegetation in relatively close spatial and temporal proximity to important hominin sites (Cohen et al, 2016; Campisano et al, 2017) This includes the Nariokotome site (NK3) and its hominin remains (Nariokotome Boy, KNM-WT 15000) located ∼3 km from the drill site; NK3 yielded the most complete Homo erectus/ ergaster skeleton ever recovered (Brown et al, 1985; Walker and Leakey, 1993). The Turkana Basin is hydrologically connected to two different precipitation modes, bimodal (spring and autumn) in the Kenyan Highlands and locally unimodal (summer) in the Ethiopian Highlands

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