12 results on '"Trauth, Martin H"'
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2. Tephrochronologic Constraints on Temporal Distribution of Large Landslides in Northwest Argentina
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Hermanns, Reginald L., Trauth, Martin H., Niedermann, Samuel, McWilliams, Michael, and Strecker, Manfred R.
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- 2000
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3. Abrupt or gradual? Change point analysis of the late Pleistocene–Holocene climate record from Chew Bahir, southern Ethiopia.
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Trauth, Martin H., Foerster, Verena, Junginger, Annett, Asrat, Asfawossen, Lamb, Henry F., and Schaebitz, Frank
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PLEISTOCENE-Holocene boundary , *SEDIMENTS , *CLIMATE change , *CULTURE , *HUMIDITY - Abstract
We used a change point analysis on a late Pleistocene–Holocene lake-sediment record from the Chew Bahir basin in the southern Ethiopian Rift to determine the amplitude and duration of past climate transitions. The most dramatic changes occurred over 240 yr (from ~15,700 to 15,460 yr) during the onset of the African Humid Period (AHP), and over 990 yr (from ~4875 to 3885 yr) during its protracted termination. The AHP was interrupted by a distinct dry period coinciding with the high-latitude Younger Dryas stadial, which had an abrupt onset (less than ~100 yr) at ~13,260 yr and lasted until ~11,730 yr. Wet-dry-wet transitions prior to the AHP may reflect the high-latitude Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles, as indicated by cross-correlation of the potassium record with the NorthGRIP ice core record between ~45–20 ka. These findings may contribute to the debates regarding the amplitude, and duration and mechanisms of past climate transitions, and their possible influence on the development of early modern human cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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4. Episodes of environmental stability versus instability in Late Cenozoic lake records of Eastern Africa.
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Trauth, Martin H., Bergner, Andreas G.N., Foerster, Verena, Junginger, Annett, Maslin, Mark A., and Schaebitz, Frank
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ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *CENOZOIC Era , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Episodes of environmental stability and instability may be equally important for African hominin speciation, dispersal, and cultural innovation. Three examples of a change from stable to unstable environmental conditions are presented on three different time scales: (1) the Mid Holocene (MH) wet–dry transition in the Chew Bahir basin (Southern Ethiopian Rift; between 11 ka and 4 ka), (2) the MIS 5–4 transition in the Naivasha basin (Central Kenya Rift; between 160 ka and 50 ka), and (3) the Early Mid Pleistocene Transition (EMPT) in the Olorgesailie basin (Southern Kenya Rift; between 1.25 Ma and 0.4 Ma). A probabilistic age modeling technique is used to determine the timing of these transitions, taking into account possible abrupt changes in the sedimentation rate including episodes of no deposition (hiatuses). Interestingly, the stable-unstable conditions identified in the three records are always associated with an orbitally-induced decrease of insolation: the descending portion of the 800 kyr cycle during the EMPT, declining eccentricity after the 115 ka maximum at the MIS 5–4 transition, and after ∼10 ka. This observation contributes to an evidence-based discussion of the possible mechanisms causing the switching between environmental stability and instability in Eastern Africa at three different orbital time scales (10,000 to 1,000,000 years) during the Cenozoic. This in turn may lead to great insights into the environmental changes occurring at the same time as hominin speciation, brain expansion, dispersal out of Africa, and cultural innovations and may provide key evidence to build new hypotheses regarding the causes of early human evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Hydrological constraints of paleo-Lake Suguta in the Northern Kenya Rift during the African Humid Period (15–5kaBP).
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Junginger, Annett and Trauth, Martin H.
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LAKE hydrology , *SEDIMENTS , *HUMIDITY , *SHORELINES , *CONVERGENCE (Meteorology) , *INTERTROPICAL convergence zone - Abstract
Abstract: During the African Humid Period (AHP, 15–5kaBP) an almost 300m deep paleo-lake covering 2200km2 developed in the Suguta Valley, in the Northern Kenya Rift. Data from lacustrine sediments and paleo-shorelines indicate that a large paleo-lake already existed by 13.9kaBP, and record rapid water level fluctuations of up to 100m within periods of 100years or less, and a final lowstand at the end of the AHP (5kaBP). We used a hydro-balance model to assess the abruptness of these water level fluctuations and identify their causes. We observed that fluctuations within the AHP were caused by abrupt changes in precipitation of 26–40%. Despite the absence of continuous lacustrine data documenting the onset of the AHP in the Suguta Valley, we conclude from the hydro-balance model that only an abrupt onset to the AHP, prior to 14.8kaBP, could have led to high water levels recorded. The modeling results suggest that the sudden increase in rainfall was the direct consequence of an eastward migration of the Congo Air Boundary (CAB), caused by an enhanced atmospheric pressure gradient between East Africa and southern Asia during a northern hemisphere (NH) summer insolation maximum. In contrast, the end of the AHP must have been gradual despite an abrupt change in the source of precipitation when a decreasing pressure gradient between Asia and Africa prevented the CAB from reaching the study area. This abruptness was probably buffered by a contemporaneous change in precession producing an insolation maximum at the equator during September–October. This change would have meant that the only rain source was the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), which would have carried a greater amount of moisture during the short rainy season thus slowing the fall in water level over a period of about 1000years in association with the reduction in insolation. The results of this study provide an indication of the amount of time available for humans in north-eastern Africa to adapt in response to a changing climate, from hunting and gathering to farming and herding. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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6. Molecular profiling of diatom assemblages in tropical lake sediments using taxon-specific PCR and Denaturing High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (PCR-DHPLC).
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EPP, LAURA S., STOOF-LEICHSENRING, KATHLEEN R., TRAUTH, MARTIN H., and TIEDEMANN, RALPH
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DIATOMS ,GENETICS ,SEDIMENTS ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,POLYMERIZATION - Abstract
Here we present a protocol to genetically detect diatoms in sediments of the Kenyan tropical Lake Naivasha, based on taxon-specific PCR amplification of short fragments (approximately 100 bp) of the small subunit ribosomal ( SSU) gene and subsequent separation of species-specific PCR products by PCR-based denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC). An evaluation of amplicons differing in primer specificity to diatoms and length of the fragments amplified demonstrated that the number of different diatom sequence types detected after cloning of the PCR products critically depended on the specificity of the primers to diatoms and the length of the amplified fragments whereby shorter fragments yielded more species of diatoms. The DHPLC was able to discriminate between very short amplicons based on the sequence difference, even if the fragments were of identical length and if the amplicons differed only in a small number of nucleotides. Generally, the method identified the dominant sequence types from mixed amplifications. A comparison with microscopic analysis of the sediment samples revealed that the sequence types identified in the molecular assessment corresponded well with the most dominant species. In summary, the PCR-based DHPLC protocol offers a fast, reliable and cost-efficient possibility to study DNA from sediments and other environmental samples with unknown organismic content, even for very short DNA fragments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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7. Comment on “Diatomaceous sediments and environmental change in the Pleistocene Olorgesailie Formation, southern Kenya Rift” by R.B. Owen, R. Potts, A.K. Behrensmeyer and P. Ditchfield [Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 269 (2008) 17–37]
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Trauth, Martin H. and Maslin, Mark A.
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FRAGILARIACEAE , *SEDIMENTS , *CLIMATE change , *PLEISTOCENE stratigraphic geology , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *LAKE sediments , *HUMAN evolution ,OLORGESAILIE Site (Kenya) - Abstract
Abstract: Owen et al. [Owen, R.B., Potts, R., Behrensmeyer, A.K., Ditchfield, P., 2008, Diatomaceous sediments and environmental change in the Pleistocene Olorgesailie Formation, southern Kenya Rift Valley. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 269, 17–37], Diatomaceous sediments and environmental change in the Pleistocene Olorgesailie Formation, southern Kenya Rift, Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, 269, 17–37) argued that diatom assemblage variations in the Olorgesailie Formation indicate considerable environmental instability with both wetter and drier periods, contradicting the proposed period of lake stability and wet climatic conditions between ca. 1.1 and 0.9million years ago as proposed by Trauth et al. [Trauth, M.H., Maslin, M.A., Deino, A., Strecker, M.R., 2005. Late Cenozoic moisture history of East Africa. Science 309, 2051–2053., Trauth, M.H., Maslin, M.A., Deino, A., Bergner, A.G.N., Dühnforth, M., Strecker, M.R., 2007. High- and low-latitude forcing of Plio-Pleistocene East African climate and human evolution. Journal of Human Evolution 53, 475–486]. Contrary to the interpretation of our work by Owen et al. [Owen, R.B., Potts, R., Behrensmeyer, A.K., Ditchfield, P., 2008, we never said that the proposed periods of large lakes were characterized by stable conditions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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8. Climatic change recorded in the sediments of the Chew Bahir basin, southern Ethiopia, during the last 45,000 years
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Foerster, Verena, Junginger, Annett, Langkamp, Oliver, Gebru, Tsige, Asrat, Asfawossen, Umer, Mohammed, Lamb, Henry F., Wennrich, Volker, Rethemeyer, Janet, Nowaczyk, Norbert, Trauth, Martin H., and Schaebitz, Frank
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CLIMATE change , *SEDIMENTS , *GEOLOGICAL basins , *MOISTURE , *BIOINDICATORS - Abstract
Abstract: East African paleoenvironments are highly variable, marked by extreme fluctuations in moisture availability, which has far-reaching implications for the origin, evolution and dispersal of Homo sapiens in and beyond the region. This paper presents results from a pilot core from the Chew Bahir basin in southern Ethiopia that records the climatic history of the past 45 ka, with emphasis on the African Humid Period (AHP, ∼15–5 ka calBP). Geochemical, physical and biological indicators show that Chew Bahir responded to climatic fluctuations on millennial to centennial timescales, and to the precessional cycle, since the Last Glacial Maximum. Potassium content of the sediment appears to be a reliable proxy for aridity, showing that Chew Bahir reacted to the insolation-controlled humidity increase of the AHP with a remarkably abrupt onset and a gradual termination, framing a sharply defined arid phase (∼12.8–11.6 ka calBP) corresponding to the Younger Dryas chronozone. The Chew Bahir record correlates well with low- and high-latitude paleoclimate records, demonstrating that the site responded to regional and global climate changes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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9. Late Pleistocene–Holocene rise and collapse of Lake Suguta, northern Kenya Rift
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Garcin, Yannick, Junginger, Annett, Melnick, Daniel, Olago, Daniel O., Strecker, Manfred R., and Trauth, Martin H.
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PLEISTOCENE-Holocene boundary , *RIFTS (Geology) , *LAKES , *HYDROLOGY , *SEDIMENTS , *WATER levels , *RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
Abstract: The Late Pleistocene to Middle Holocene African Humid Period (AHP) was characterized by dramatic hydrologic fluctuations in the tropics. A better knowledge of the timing, spatial extent, and magnitude of these hydrological fluctuations is essential to decipher the climate-forcing mechanisms that controlled them. The Suguta Valley (2°N, northern Kenya Rift) has recorded extreme environmental changes during the AHP. Extensive outcrops of lacustrine sediments, ubiquitous wave-cut notches, shorelines, and broad terrace treads along the valley margins are the vestiges of Lake Suguta, which once filled an 80km long and 20km wide volcano–tectonic depression. Lake Suguta was deep between 16.5 and 8.5calkaBP. During its maximum highstand, it attained a water depth of ca 300m, a surface area of ca 2150km2, and a volume of ca 390km3. The spatial distribution of lake sediments, the elevation of palaeo-shorelines, and other geomorphic evidences suggest that palaeo-Lake Suguta had an overflow towards the Turkana basin to the north. After 8.5calkaBP, Lake Suguta abruptly disappeared. A comparison of the Lake Suguta water-level curve with other reconstructed water levels from the northern part of the East African Rift System shows that local insolation, which is dominated by precessional cycles, may have controlled the timing of lake highstands in this region. Our data show that changes of lake levels close to the Equator seem to be driven by fluctuations of spring insolation, while fluctuations north of the Equator are apparently related to variations in summer insolation. However, since these inferred timings of lake-level changes are mostly based on the radiocarbon dating of carbonate shells, which may have been affected by a local age reservoir, alternative dating methods are needed to support this regional synthesis. Between 12.7 and 11.8calkaBP, approximately during the Northern Hemisphere high-latitude Younger Dryas, the water level of Lake Suguta fell by ca 50m, suggesting that remote influences also affected local hydrology. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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10. What we can learn from deltoidal icositetrahedrons about climate: Authigenic mineral transformation as sensitive climate proxy in the Chew Bahir sediment cores (southern Ethiopia).
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Günter, Christina, Foerster, Verena, Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew S., Deocampo, Daniel M., Lamb, Henry F., Malek, Thorsten, Schaebitz, Frank, and Trauth, Martin H.
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FOSSIL hominids , *MESOLITHIC Period , *SEDIMENTS , *CLIMATOLOGY , *SOCIAL evolution , *MASTICATION - Abstract
Six sites in Ethiopia and Kenya, all adjacent to key paleoanthropological sites have been investigated as part of the Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP), aiming at an enhanced understanding of climatic influences on human physical and cultural evolution. The recovered sediment cores from the six sites all together span the last ~3.5 Ma. The sediment core records archive environmental change during diverse milestones in human evolution, and times of dispersal and technological and cultural innovation. The 280 m-long Chew Bahir lacustrine record, recovered from a tectonically-bound basin in the southern Ethiopian rift in late 2014, covers the past ~600 ka of environmental history, a time period that includes the transition to the Middle Stone Age, and the origin and dispersal of modern Homo sapiens. Developing a continuous climate history based on sediment core composition is not straightforward because on one hand some indicators might only be preserved intermittently and on the other hand the physical and chemical properties of the sedimentary deposits do not have a linear relationship to climate. Here we present the first outcome of our ongoing work on deciphering direct paleoenvironmental information from authigenic mineral transformations in the long (~280 m) Chew Bahir sediment cores. First results suggest mineralogical and geochemical indicators record wet, dry and hyper-arid climate intervals. Preliminary work suggests that the most extreme evaporative phases are represented by authigenic mineral assemblages including Mg-enriched clays, low-temperature authigenic illite and euhedral analcime. SEM and Energy Dispersive Spectrometer (EDS) analyses confirm that the variations in the analcime abundance that are evident in the XRD dataset seem to be distinctly formed deltoidal icositetrahedrons. These are known to form in highly saline and alkaline brines (pH 9 and higher) and can be associated with pronounced arid phases. Understanding and determining the degree of authigenic mineral alteration in the Chew Bahir records will enable interpretation of µXRF-derived indicators (e.g. K correlated with aridity), and provide direct paleohydrologic data. Together with a well-constrained age-model, our growing understanding of site-specific proxy formation and the establishment of climate proxies for Chew Bahir will provide a robust environmental history on decadal to orbital timescales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
11. If only mud could talk. . . what we can learn from minerals and grains in the Chew Bahir sediment cores (southern Ethiopia).
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Foerster, Verena E., Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew S., Deocampo, Daniel M., Duesing, Walter, Günter, Christina, Junginger, Annett, Kraemer, Hauke, Lamb, Henry F., Opitz, Stephan, Schaebitz, Frank, and Trauth, Martin H.
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MUD , *GRAIN , *MINERALS , *SEDIMENTS , *MASTICATION - Published
- 2018
12. Is the Chew Bahir sediment record influenced by wet-dry fluctuations due to monsoonal changes?
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Schäbitz, Frank, Opitz, Stephan, Foerster, Verena, Asrat, Asfawossen, Deino, Alan, Deocampo, Daniel M., Duesing, Walter, Günter, Christina, Junginger, Annett, Cohen, Andrew S., Lamb, Henry F., Leng, Melanie J., Dean, Jonathan R., Roberts, Helen M., and Trauth, Martin H.
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SEDIMENTS , *MASTICATION , *RECORDS - Published
- 2018
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