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1.
J Hum Evol ; 56(1): 11-24, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19007966

ABSTRACT

A sequence of paleosols in the Solo Basin, Central Java, Indonesia, documents the local and regional environments present when Homo erectus spread through Southeast Asia during the early Pleistocene. The earliest human immigrants encountered a low-relief lake-margin landscape dominated by moist grasslands with open woodlands in the driest landscape positions. By 1.5 Ma, large streams filled the lake and the landscape became more riverine in nature, with riparian forests, savanna, and open woodland. Paleosol morphology and carbon isotope values of soil organic matter and pedogenic carbonates indicate a long-term shift toward regional drying or increased duration of the annual dry season through the early Pleistocene. This suggests that an annual dry season associated with monsoon conditions was an important aspect of the paleoclimate in which early humans spread from Africa to Southeast Asia.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Hominidae/genetics , Paleontology , Africa , Animals , Carbon Isotopes , Geologic Sediments , Humans , Indonesia , Time Factors
2.
Nature ; 423(6935): 70-4, 2003 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12721626

ABSTRACT

Late Cretaceous sediments from the Western Interior of North America yield exceptionally well preserved fossils that serve as proxies for the rapidly changing climate preceding the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary (about 67-65 Myr ago). Here we reconstruct the ontogenetic history of a Maastrichtian-age fish, Vorhisia vulpes, by using the carbon, oxygen and strontium isotope ratios of four aragonite otoliths collected from the Fox Hills Formation of South Dakota. Individuals of V. vulpes spawned in brackish water (about 70-80% seawater) and during their first year migrated to open marine waters of the Western Interior Seaway, where they remained for 3 years before returning to the estuary, presumably to spawn and die. The mean delta(18)O from the marine growth phase of V. vulpes yields a seawater temperature of 18 degrees C, which is consistent with leaf physiognomy and general-circulation-model temperature estimates for the Western Interior during the latest Maastrichtian.


Subject(s)
Animal Migration , Fishes/physiology , Fossils , Models, Biological , Animals , Diet , Fishes/classification , Geologic Sediments , North America , Seawater , Temperature
3.
Science ; 298(5593): 565, 2002 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12386326
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