170 results on '"Lane, Christine"'
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2. Reply to: Possible magmatic CO2 influence on the Laacher See eruption date
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Reinig, Frederick, Wacker, Lukas, Jöris, Olaf, Oppenheimer, Clive, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Nievergelt, Daniel, Adolphi, Florian, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Keppler, Frank, Land, Alexander, Lane, Christine, Pfanz, Hardy, Remmele, Sabine, Sigl, Michael, Sookdeo, Adam, and Büntgen, Ulf
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- 2023
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3. Age of the oldest known Homo sapiens from eastern Africa
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Vidal, Céline M., Lane, Christine S., Asrat, Asfawossen, Barfod, Dan N., Mark, Darren F., Tomlinson, Emma L., Tadesse, Amdemichael Zafu, Yirgu, Gezahegn, Deino, Alan, Hutchison, William, Mounier, Aurélien, and Oppenheimer, Clive
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- 2022
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4. Community established best practice recommendations for tephra studies—from collection through analysis
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Wallace, Kristi L., Bursik, Marcus I., Kuehn, Stephen, Kurbatov, Andrei V., Abbott, Peter, Bonadonna, Costanza, Cashman, Katharine, Davies, Siwan M., Jensen, Britta, Lane, Christine, Plunkett, Gill, Smith, Victoria C., Tomlinson, Emma, Thordarsson, Thor, and Walker, J. Douglas
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- 2022
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5. Synchronous vegetation response to the last glacial-interglacial transition in northwest Europe
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Engels, Stefan, Lane, Christine S., Haliuc, Aritina, Hoek, Wim Z., Muschitiello, Francesco, Baneschi, Ilaria, Bouwman, Annerieke, Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, Collins, James, de Bruijn, Renee, Heiri, Oliver, Hubay, Katalin, Jones, Gwydion, Laug, Andreas, Merkt, Josef, Müller, Meike, Peters, Tom, Peterse, Francien, Staff, Richard A., ter Schure, Anneke T. M., Turner, Falko, van den Bos, Valerie, and Wagner-Cremer, Frederike
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- 2022
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6. Precise date for the Laacher See eruption synchronizes the Younger Dryas
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Reinig, Frederick, Wacker, Lukas, Jöris, Olaf, Oppenheimer, Clive, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Nievergelt, Daniel, Adolphi, Florian, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Land, Alexander, Lane, Christine, Pfanz, Hardy, Remmele, Sabine, Sigl, Michael, Sookdeo, Adam, and Büntgen, Ulf
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- 2021
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7. The >250-kyr Lake Chala record: a tephrostratotype correlating archaeological, palaeoenvironmental and volcanic sequences across eastern Africa
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Martin-Jones, Catherine, Lane, Christine S., Blaauw, Maarten, Mark, Darren F., Verschuren, Dirk, Van der Meeren, Thijs, Van Daele, Maarten, Wynton, Hannah, Blegen, Nick, Kisaka, Mary, Leng, Melanie J., Barker, Philip, Martin-Jones, Catherine, Lane, Christine S., Blaauw, Maarten, Mark, Darren F., Verschuren, Dirk, Van der Meeren, Thijs, Van Daele, Maarten, Wynton, Hannah, Blegen, Nick, Kisaka, Mary, Leng, Melanie J., and Barker, Philip
- Abstract
Regional tephrostratigraphic frameworks connect palaeoclimate, archaeological and volcanological records preserved in soils or lake sediments via shared volcanic ash (tephra) layers. In eastern Africa, tracing of tephra isochrons between geoarchaeological sequences is an established chronostratigraphic approach. However, to date, few long tephra records exist from sites with continuous depositional sequences, such as lake sediments, which offer the potential to connect local and discontinuous sequences at the regional scale. Long lake sediment sequences may also capture more complete eruptive histories of understudied volcanic centres. Here, we present and date the tephrostratigraphic record of a >250,000-year (>250-kyr) continuous sediment sequence extracted from Lake Chala, a crater lake on the Kenya-Tanzania border near Mt Kilimanjaro. Single-grain glass major and minor element analyses of visible and six cryptotephra layers reveal compositions ranging from mafic foidites and basanites to more evolved tephri-phonolites, phonolites, trachytes and a single rhyolite. Of these, nine are correlated to scoria cone eruptions of neighbouring Mt Kilimanjaro or the Chyulu volcanic field ∼60 km to the north; seven are correlated to phonolitic eruptions of Mt Meru, ∼100 km to the west; and four to voluminous trachytic eruptions of Central Kenyan Rift (CKR) volcanoes located ∼350 km to the north. The only rhyolitic tephra layer, a cryptotephra, correlates to the 73.7-ka BP (before present, taken as 1950 CE) Younger Toba Tuff (YTT) from Sumatra. Two of the CKR tephra layers provide direct ties with terrestrial sequences relevant to Middle Stone Age archaeology of the eastern Lake Victoria basin in Kenya. Absolute age estimates obtained by direct 40Ar/39Ar dating of 10 tephra layers are combined with six 210Pb and 162 14C dates covering the last 25-kyr and the well-constrained known age of the YTT to build a first absolute chronology for the full Lake Chala sediment sequence. T
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- 2024
8. Hydroclimate changes in eastern Africa over the past 200,000 years may have influenced early human dispersal
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Schaebitz, Frank, Asrat, Asfawossen, Lamb, Henry F., Cohen, Andrew S., Foerster, Verena, Duesing, Walter, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Opitz, Stephan, Viehberg, Finn A., Vogelsang, Ralf, Dean, Jonathan, Leng, Melanie J., Junginger, Annett, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan, Lane, Christine S., Roberts, Helen M., Vidal, Céline, Tiedemann, Ralph, and Trauth, Martin H.
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- 2021
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9. Exploring the variability of microtephra deposits : chemical chracterisation and discrimination methods
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Lane, Christine S.
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551.9 - Published
- 2009
10. Rifted margin formation in the northwest Indian Ocean : the extensional and magmatic history of the Laxmi Ridge continental margin
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Lane, Christine Irene
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551.8 - Abstract
This thesis focuses on geophysical data collected over the Laxmi Ridge margin. A 480 km wide-angle velocity model is presented, along with coincident normal-incidence reflection data, gravity and magnetic modelling. The wide-angle model is broadly divided into four areas of crustal provenance: the southern-most crust is Chron 27 oceanic crust, which is around 5 km thick and reaches velocities of 7.4 km s⁻¹ at its base. Laxmi Ridge is adjacent to this crust, and is a 130 km wide, 9 km thick section of thinned continental crust. It is underlain by 11 km of high velocity arterial, whose P-wave velocities reach 7.70 km s⁻¹ at the base. Laxmi Ridge abuts against Gop Rift, which is a 55 km wide basin with crust up to 13 km thick. North of Gop Rift is the continental rise of India, which is interpreted as stretched continental crust. The Laxmi Ridge margin has features usually diagnostic of amagmatic rifted margins, including thin (5 km) first-formed oceanic crust south of Laxmi Ridge and weak seaward-dipping reflectors at the ocean-continent boundary. However, thick oceanic crust is observed in Gap Rift, an isolated asymmetric basin landward of Laxmi Ridge. Gop Rift is flanked by two ~ 100 km wide, almost 13 km thick bodies in the deep crust, whose P-wave velocities reach 7.70 km s⁻¹. These bodies are interpreted to be magmatic underplate associated with rifting over a thermal anomaly. This apparent disparity between magmatic and amagmatic features on the same margin is solved if the magmatic features are attributed to a prior phase of spreading in Gap Rift, most likely Chron 29 in age, with the magmatic material supplied by enhanced melting over the Deccan plume. This spreading ceased once the thermal anomaly cooled. The final breakup of India and the Seychelles then occurred within the weakened underplated lithosphere, and was relatively amagmatic despite the rapid extension.
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- 2006
11. Human occupation of northern India spans the Toba super-eruption ~74,000 years ago
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Clarkson, Chris, Harris, Clair, Li, Bo, Neudorf, Christina M., Roberts, Richard G., Lane, Christine, Norman, Kasih, Pal, Jagannath, Jones, Sacha, Shipton, Ceri, Koshy, Jinu, Gupta, M. C., Mishra, D. P., Dubey, A. K., Boivin, Nicole, and Petraglia, Michael
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- 2020
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12. Reply to: Possible magmatic CO2 influence on the Laacher See eruption date.
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Reinig, Frederick, Wacker, Lukas, Jöris, Olaf, Oppenheimer, Clive, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Nievergelt, Daniel, Adolphi, Florian, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Keppler, Frank, Land, Alexander, Lane, Christine, Pfanz, Hardy, Remmele, Sabine, Sigl, Michael, Sookdeo, Adam, and Büntgen, Ulf
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- 2023
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13. Ash from the Toba supereruption in Lake Malawi shows no volcanic winter in East Africa at 75 ka
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Lane, Christine S., Chorn, Ben T., and Johnson, Thomas C.
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- 2013
14. Neanderthals on the Lower Danube: Middle Palaeolithic evidence in the Danube Gorges of the Balkans
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Borić, Dušan, Cristiani, Emanuela, Hopkins, Rachel, Schwenninger, Jean-Luc, Gerometta, Katarina, French, Charly, Giuseppina, Mutri, Ćalić, Jelena, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Marín-Arroyo, Ana B., Jones, Jennifer, Stevens, Rhianon E., Masciana, Alana, Uno, Kevin, Richter, Kristine, Antonović, Dragana, Wehr, Karol, Lane, Christine, White, Dustin, Borić, Dušan, Cristiani, Emanuela, Hopkins, Rachel, Schwenninger, Jean-Luc, Gerometta, Katarina, French, Charly, Giuseppina, Mutri, Ćalić, Jelena, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Marín-Arroyo, Ana B., Jones, Jennifer, Stevens, Rhianon E., Masciana, Alana, Uno, Kevin, Richter, Kristine, Antonović, Dragana, Wehr, Karol, Lane, Christine, and White, Dustin
- Abstract
The article presents evidence about the Middle Palaeolithic and Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition interval in the karst area of the Danube Gorges in the Lower Danube Basin. We review the extant data and present new evidence from two recently investigated sites found on the Serbian side of the Danube River – Tabula Traiana and Dubočka-Kozja caves. The two sites have yielded layers dating to both the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic and have been investigated by the application of modern standards of excavation and recovery along with a suite of state-of-the-art analytical procedures. The presentation focuses on micromorphological analyses of the caves’ sediments, cryptotephra characterization of Tabula Traiana Cave sediments, a suite of new radiometric dates (AMS and OSL) as well as proteomics (ZooMS) and stable isotope data in discerning patterns of human occupation of these locales over the long-term.
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- 2022
15. Synchronous vegetation response to the last glacial-interglacial transition in northwest Europe
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Geomorfologie, Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change, Organic geochemistry, Palaeo-ecologie, Organic geochemistry & molecular biogeology, Engels, Stefan, Lane, Christine S., Haliuc, Aritina, Hoek, Wim Z., Muschitiello, Francesco, Baneschi, Ilaria, Bouwman, Annerieke, Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, Collins, James, de Bruijn, Renee, Heiri, Oliver, Hubay, Katalin, Jones, Gwydion, Laug, Andreas, Merkt, Josef, Müller, Meike, Peters, Tom, Peterse, Francien, Staff, Richard A., ter Schure, Anneke T. M., Turner, Falko, van den Bos, Valerie, Wagner-Cremer, Frederike, Geomorfologie, Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change, Organic geochemistry, Palaeo-ecologie, Organic geochemistry & molecular biogeology, Engels, Stefan, Lane, Christine S., Haliuc, Aritina, Hoek, Wim Z., Muschitiello, Francesco, Baneschi, Ilaria, Bouwman, Annerieke, Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, Collins, James, de Bruijn, Renee, Heiri, Oliver, Hubay, Katalin, Jones, Gwydion, Laug, Andreas, Merkt, Josef, Müller, Meike, Peters, Tom, Peterse, Francien, Staff, Richard A., ter Schure, Anneke T. M., Turner, Falko, van den Bos, Valerie, and Wagner-Cremer, Frederike
- Published
- 2022
16. Pleistocene climate variability in eastern Africa influenced hominin evolution
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Foerster, Verena, Asrat, Asfawossen, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Brown, Erik T., Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan, Duesing, Walter, Grove, Matthew, Hahn, Annette, Junginger, Annett, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Lane, Christine S., Opitz, Stephan, Noren, Anders, Roberts, Helen M., Stockhecke, Mona, Tiedemann, Ralph, Vidal, Celine M., Vogelsang, Ralf, Cohen, Andrew S., Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, Trauth, Martin H., Foerster, Verena, Asrat, Asfawossen, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Brown, Erik T., Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan, Duesing, Walter, Grove, Matthew, Hahn, Annette, Junginger, Annett, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Lane, Christine S., Opitz, Stephan, Noren, Anders, Roberts, Helen M., Stockhecke, Mona, Tiedemann, Ralph, Vidal, Celine M., Vogelsang, Ralf, Cohen, Andrew S., Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, and Trauth, Martin H.
- Abstract
Despite more than half a century of hominin fossil discoveries in eastern Africa, the regional environmental context of hominin evolution and dispersal is not well established due to the lack of continuous palaeoenvironmental records from one of the proven habitats of early human populations, particularly for the Pleistocene epoch. Here we present a 620,000-year environmental record from Chew Bahir, southern Ethiopia, which is proximal to key fossil sites. Our record documents the potential influence of different episodes of climatic variability on hominin biological and cultural transformation. The appearance of high anatomical diversity in hominin groups coincides with long-lasting and relatively stable humid conditions from similar to 620,000 to 275,000 years bp (episodes 1-6), interrupted by several abrupt and extreme hydroclimate perturbations. A pattern of pronounced climatic cyclicity transformed habitats during episodes 7-9 (similar to 275,000-60,000 years bp), a crucial phase encompassing the gradual transition from Acheulean to Middle Stone Age technologies, the emergence of Homo sapiens in eastern Africa and key human social and cultural innovations. Those accumulative innovations plus the alignment of humid pulses between northeastern Africa and the eastern Mediterranean during high-frequency climate oscillations of episodes 10-12 (similar to 60,000-10,000 years bp) could have facilitated the global dispersal of H. sapiens.
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- 2022
17. Geochronology and glass geochemistry of major pleistocene eruptions in the Main Ethiopian Rift: Towards a regional tephrostratigraphy
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Vidal, Céline M., Fontijn, Karen, Lane, Christine S, Asrat, Asfawossen, Barfod, Dan, Tomlinson, Emma L, Piermattei, Alma, Hutchison, William, Tadesse, Amdemichael, Yirgu, Gezahegn, Deino, Alan L, Moussallam, Yves, Mohr, Paul, Williams, Frances, Mather, Tamsin A., Pyle, David M, Oppenheimer, Clive, Vidal, Céline M., Fontijn, Karen, Lane, Christine S, Asrat, Asfawossen, Barfod, Dan, Tomlinson, Emma L, Piermattei, Alma, Hutchison, William, Tadesse, Amdemichael, Yirgu, Gezahegn, Deino, Alan L, Moussallam, Yves, Mohr, Paul, Williams, Frances, Mather, Tamsin A., Pyle, David M, and Oppenheimer, Clive
- Abstract
The Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) is renowned as a focus of investigations into human origins. It is also the site of many large volcanic calderas, whose eruptions have spanned the timeframe of speciation, cultural innovation, and dispersal of our species. Yet, despite their significance for dating human fossils and cultural materials, the timing and geochemical signatures of some of the largest eruptions have remained poorly constrained at best. Here, through a programme of field surveys, geochemical analysis and 40Ar/39Ar dating, we report the ages of MER ignimbrites and link them to widespread tephra layers found in sequences of archaeological and paleoenvironmental significance. We date major eruptions of Fentale (76 ± 18 ka), Shala (ca. 145–155 ka), Kone (184 ± 42 ka and ca. 200 ± 12 ka) and Gedemsa (251 ± 47 ka) volcanoes, and correlate a suite of regionally important tephra horizons. Geochemical analysis highlights the predominantly peralkaline rhyolitic melt compositions (7.5–12 wt% Na2O + K2O, 70–76 wt% SiO2) across the central MER and remarkable similarity in incompatible trace element ratios, limiting the correlation of deposits via glass composition alone. However, by integrating stratigraphic and geochronological evidence from proximal deposits, lake sediment cores and distal outcrops at archaeological sites, we have traced ash layers associated with the ca. 177 ka Corbetti, ca. 145–155 ka Shala and ca. 108 ka Bora-Baricha-Tullu-Moye eruptions across southern Ethiopia. In addition to strengthening the tephrochronological framework that supports paleoenvironmental and archaeological work in the region, our findings have wider implications for evaluating the hypothesis of a middle Pleistocene ‘ignimbrite flare-up’ in the MER, and for evaluating the impacts of these great eruptions on landscapes, hydrology, and human ecology., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2022
18. Volcanic ash layers illuminate the resilience of Neanderthals and early modern humans to natural hazards
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Lowe, John, Barton, Nick, Blockley, Simon, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Cullen, Victoria L., Davies, William, Gamble, Clive, Grant, Katharine, Hardiman, Mark, Housley, Rupert, Lane, Christine S., Lee, Sharen, Lewis, Mark, MacLeod, Alison, Menzies, Martin, Müller, Wolfgang, Pollard, Mark, Price, Catherine, Roberts, Andrew P., Rohling, Eelco J., Satow, Chris, Smith, Victoria C., Stringer, Chris B., Tomlinson, Emma L., White, Dustin, Albert, Paul, Arienzo, Ilenia, Barker, Graeme, Borić, Dušan, Carandente, Antonio, Civetta, Lucia, Ferrier, Catherine, Guadelli, Jean-Luc, Karkanas, Panagiotis, Koumouzelis, Margarita, Müller, Ulrich C., Orsi, Giovanni, Pross, Jörg, Rosi, Mauro, Shalamanov-Korobar, Ljiljiana, Sirakov, Nikolay, and Tzedakis, Polychronis C.
- Published
- 2012
19. Reply to: Possible magmatic CO2influence on the Laacher See eruption date
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Reinig, Frederick, Wacker, Lukas, Jöris, Olaf, Oppenheimer, Clive, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Nievergelt, Daniel, Adolphi, Florian, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Keppler, Frank, Land, Alexander, Lane, Christine, Pfanz, Hardy, Remmele, Sabine, Sigl, Michael, Sookdeo, Adam, and Büntgen, Ulf
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- 2023
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20. Humans thrived in South Africa through the Toba eruption about 74,000 years ago
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Smith, Eugene I., Jacobs, Zenobia, Johnsen, Racheal, Ren, Minghua, Fisher, Erich C., Oestmo, Simen, Wilkins, Jayne, Harris, Jacob A., Karkanas, Panagiotis, Fitch, Shelby, Ciravolo, Amber, Keenan, Deborah, Cleghorn, Naomi, Lane, Christine S., Matthews, Thalassa, and Marean, Curtis W.
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Volcanoes -- Natural history -- South Africa ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Author(s): Eugene I. Smith (corresponding author) [1]; Zenobia Jacobs [2]; Racheal Johnsen [1]; Minghua Ren [1]; Erich C. Fisher [3, 4]; Simen Oestmo [4]; Jayne Wilkins [5]; Jacob A. Harris [...]
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- 2018
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21. The US federal taxation of Bitcoins and other convertible virtual currencies.
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Lane, Christine and Magidenko, Gene
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Crypto-currencies -- Taxation -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Income tax -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation - Abstract
Bitcoins burst into the public eye seemingly from nowhere, like Athena emerging from Zeus's brow, (1) and changed the virtual currency paradigm. In 2010 and 2011, Bitcoins traded for well [...]
- Published
- 2015
22. Neanderthals on the Lower Danube: Middle Palaeolithic evidence in the Danube Gorges of the Balkans
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Borić, Dušan, Cristiani, Emanuela, Hopkins, Rachel, Schwenninger, Jean-Luc, Gerometta, Katarina, French, Charles A. I., Mutri, Giuseppina, Calić, Jelena, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Marin-Arroyo, Ana B., Jones, Jennifer R., Stevens, Rhiannon, Masciana, Alana, Uno, Kevin, Richter, Kristine Korzow, Antonović, Dragana, Wehr, Karol, Lane, Christine, White, Dustin, Borić, Dušan, Cristiani, Emanuela, Hopkins, Rachel, Schwenninger, Jean-Luc, Gerometta, Katarina, French, Charles A. I., Mutri, Giuseppina, Calić, Jelena, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Marin-Arroyo, Ana B., Jones, Jennifer R., Stevens, Rhiannon, Masciana, Alana, Uno, Kevin, Richter, Kristine Korzow, Antonović, Dragana, Wehr, Karol, Lane, Christine, and White, Dustin
- Abstract
The article presents evidence about the Middle Palaeolithic and Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition interval in the karst area of the Danube Gorges in the Lower Danube Basin. We review the extant data and present new evidence from two recently investigated sites found on the Serbian side of the Danube River - Tabula Traiana and Dubocka-Kozja caves. The two sites have yielded layers dating to both the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic and have been investigated by the application of modern standards of excavation and recovery along with a suite of state-of-the-art analytical procedures. The presentation focuses on micromorphological analyses of the caves' sediments, characterisation of cryptotephra, a suite of new radiometric dates (accelerator mass spectrometry and optically stimulated luminescence) as well as proteomics (zooarchaeology by mass spectrometry) and stable isotope data in discerning patterns of human occupation of these locales over the long term.
- Published
- 2021
23. A tale of two signals: Global and local influences on the Late Pleistocene loess sequences in Bulgarian Lower Danube
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Fenn, Kaja, Thomas, David S.G., Durcan, Julie A., Millar, Ian L., Veres, Daniel, Piermattei, Alma, Lane, Christine S., Fenn, Kaja, Thomas, David S.G., Durcan, Julie A., Millar, Ian L., Veres, Daniel, Piermattei, Alma, and Lane, Christine S.
- Abstract
In Central and Eastern Europe, research has been focused on loess associated with a plateau-setting, which preserves distinct and well-developed loess and palaeosol units linked to orbital scale changes. This has led to the view that during the last glacial period the Middle and Lower Danube predominantly experienced dry continental climates and supported steppic environments. However outside of the typical plateau setting, some authors have reported a presence of embryonic palaeosols within loess units suggesting sufficient moisture for short-term pedogenesis, and therefore either large scale moisture delivery systems and/or influence of local climatic and/geomorphic factors. Here the palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic history is reconstructed based on two loess-palaeosol profiles in Slivata, North Bulgaria. The site is located in proximity to both the Carpathian and Balkan Mountains and rest on the Danube river terrace. To understand the timing of sediment deposition and dust fluxes chronological approaches combining quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL), feldspar post infrared-infrared stimulated luminescence (pIR-IRSL), and tephra correlation were applied. The results are coupled with high-resolution particle size and magnetic susceptibility analysis to provide an overview of past environmental conditions at the site. Finally, zircon U–Pb ages are used to understand potential changes to sediment delivery patterns, in the context of the site development. The investigated profile at Slivata 2 preserves a loess-palaeosol record spanning 52–30 ka, with a very complex sedimentary sequence that switches between periods of enhanced dust flux and sediment accumulation, and palaeosol development. The Slivata 2 sequence is also punctuated by multiple thin “palaeosol” like units that are interpreted as colluvial “soil” deposits on the basis of sedimentology, provenance, and geochronology, indicating a highly variable and dynamic landscape responding to the sur
- Published
- 2021
24. Using multiple chronometers to establish a long, directly-dated lacustrine record: Constraining > 600,000 years of environmental change at Chew Bahir, Ethiopia
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Roberts, Helen M., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan L., Lane, Christine S., Vidal, Celine, Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew, Foerster, Verena, Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, Trauth, Martin H., Viehberg, Finn A., Roberts, Helen M., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan L., Lane, Christine S., Vidal, Celine, Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew, Foerster, Verena, Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, Trauth, Martin H., and Viehberg, Finn A.
- Abstract
Despite eastern Africa being a key location in the emergence of Homo sapiens and their subsequent dispersal out of Africa, there is a paucity of long, well-dated climate records in the region to contextualize this history. To address this issue, we dated a similar to 293 m long composite sediment core from Chew Bahir, south Ethiopia, using three independent chronometers (radiocarbon, Ar-40/Ar-39, and optically stimulated luminescence) combined with geochemical correlation to a known-age tephra. The site is located in a climatically sensitive region, and is close to Omo Kibish, the earliest documented Homo sapiens fossil site in eastern Africa, and to the proposed dispersal routes for H. sapiens out of Africa. The 30 ages generated by the various techniques are internally consistent, stratigraphically coherent, and span the full range of the core depth. A Bayesian age-depth model developed using these ages results in a chronology that forms one of the longest independently dated, high-resolution lacustrine sediment records from eastern Africa. The chronology illustrates that any record of environmental change preserved in the composite sediment core from Chew Bahir would span the entire timescale of modern human evolution and dispersal, encompassing the time period of the transition from Acheulean to Middle Stone Age (MSA), and subsequently to Later Stone Age (LSA) technology, making the core well-placed to address questions regarding environmental change and hominin evolutionary adaptation. The benefits to such studies of direct dating and the use of multiple independent chronometers are discussed. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021
25. Using multiple chronometers to establish a long, directly-dated lacustrine record: Constraining >600,000 years of environmental change at Chew Bahir, Ethiopia
- Author
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Roberts, Helen M., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan L., Lane, Christine S., Vidal, Céline, Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew, Foerster, Verena, Lamb, Henry F., Schäbitz, Frank, Trauth, Martin H., Viehberg, Finn A., Roberts, Helen M., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan L., Lane, Christine S., Vidal, Céline, Asrat, Asfawossen, Cohen, Andrew, Foerster, Verena, Lamb, Henry F., Schäbitz, Frank, Trauth, Martin H., and Viehberg, Finn A.
- Abstract
Despite eastern Africa being a key location in the emergence of Homo sapiens and their subsequent dispersal out of Africa, there is a paucity of long, well-dated climate records in the region to contextualize this history. To address this issue, we dated a ∼293 m long composite sediment core from Chew Bahir, south Ethiopia, using three independent chronometers (radiocarbon, 40Ar/39Ar, and optically stimulated luminescence) combined with geochemical correlation to a known-age tephra. The site is located in a climatically sensitive region, and is close to Omo Kibish, the earliest documented Homo sapiens fossil site in eastern Africa, and to the proposed dispersal routes for H. sapiens out of Africa. The 30 ages generated by the various techniques are internally consistent, stratigraphically coherent, and span the full range of the core depth. A Bayesian age-depth model developed using these ages results in a chronology that forms one of the longest independently dated, high-resolution lacustrine sediment records from eastern Africa. The chronology illustrates that any record of environmental change preserved in the composite sediment core from Chew Bahir would span the entire timescale of modern human evolution and dispersal, encompassing the time period of the transition from Acheulean to Middle Stone Age (MSA), and subsequently to Later Stone Age (LSA) technology, making the core well-placed to address questions regarding environmental change and hominin evolutionary adaptation. The benefits to such studies of direct dating and the use of multiple independent chronometers are discussed. Highlights • Four independent dating methods applied to ∼293 m lake core from southern Ethiopia. • Reveals 620 ka high-resolution sedimentary record near key fossil hominin sites. • Mean accumulation rate of 0.47 mm/a comparable to other African lacustrine sediments. • Accumulation rate fell to 0.1 mm/a during MIS 2, likely due to reduced sediment supply. • Use of multiple independen
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
26. Corrigendum to 'Towards a dendrochronologically refined date of the Laacher See eruption around 13,000 years ago' (Quaternary Science Reviews (2020) 229, (S0277379119304159), (10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.106128))
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Reinig, Frederick, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Jöris, Olaf, Lane, Christine, Nievergelt, Daniel, Oppenheimer, Clive, Park, Cornelia, Pfanz, Hardy, Riede, Felix, Schmincke, Hans Ulrich, Street, Martin, Wacker, Lukas, and Büntgen, Ulf
- Subjects
Biologie - Abstract
When this article was first published a reference was incorrectly printed with the given names and family names transposed. Hence the citation in the text to the reference “Gunther et al., 2019" should be “Kletetschka et al., 2019". Accordingly, in the reference list, the entry: "Gunther, K., Daniel, V., Jolana, H., van der Knaap, W.O., van Leeuwen, J.F., Marco, H., 2019. Laacher See tephra discovered in Bohemian Forest, Germany, east of the eruption. Quat. Geochronol. 51, 130–139". Should be replaced by: “Kletetschka, G., D. Vondrák, J. Hruba, W. O. van der Knaap, J. F. N. van Leeuwen, and M. Heurich (2019), Laacher See tephra discovered in the Bohemian Forest, Germany, east of the eruption, Quat. Geochronol., 51, 130–139.” Korrektur zu 10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.106128
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- 2020
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27. ICDP workshop on the Lake Tanganyika Scientific Drilling Project: a late Miocene–present record of climate, rifting, and ecosystem evolution from the world's oldest tropical lake
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Russell, James M., Barker, Philip, Cohen, Andrew, Ivory, Sarah, Kimirei, Ishmael, Lane, Christine, Leng, Melanie, Maganza, Neema, McGlue, Michael, Msaky, Emma, Noren, Anders, Park Boush, Lisa, Salzburger, Walter, Scholz, Christopher, Tiedemann, Ralph, Nuru, Shaidu, Russell, James M., Barker, Philip, Cohen, Andrew, Ivory, Sarah, Kimirei, Ishmael, Lane, Christine, Leng, Melanie, Maganza, Neema, McGlue, Michael, Msaky, Emma, Noren, Anders, Park Boush, Lisa, Salzburger, Walter, Scholz, Christopher, Tiedemann, Ralph, and Nuru, Shaidu
- Abstract
The Neogene and Quaternary are characterized by enormous changes in global climate and environments, including global cooling and the establishment of northern high-latitude glaciers. These changes reshaped global ecosystems, including the emergence of tropical dry forests and savannahs that are found in Africa today, which in turn may have influenced the evolution of humans and their ancestors. However, despite decades of research we lack long, continuous, well-resolved records of tropical climate, ecosystem changes, and surface processes necessary to understand their interactions and influences on evolutionary processes. Lake Tanganyika, Africa, contains the most continuous, long continental climate record from the mid-Miocene (∼10 Ma) to the present anywhere in the tropics and has long been recognized as a top-priority site for scientific drilling. The lake is surrounded by the Miombo woodlands, part of the largest dry tropical biome on Earth. Lake Tanganyika also harbors incredibly diverse endemic biota and an entirely unexplored deep microbial biosphere, and it provides textbook examples of rift segmentation, fault behavior, and associated surface processes. To evaluate the interdisciplinary scientific opportunities that an ICDP drilling program at Lake Tanganyika could offer, more than 70 scientists representing 12 countries and a variety of scientific disciplines met in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in June 2019. The team developed key research objectives in basin evolution, source-to-sink sedimentology, organismal evolution, geomicrobiology, paleoclimatology, paleolimnology, terrestrial paleoecology, paleoanthropology, and geochronology to be addressed through scientific drilling on Lake Tanganyika. They also identified drilling targets and strategies, logistical challenges, and education and capacity building programs to be carried out through the project. Participants concluded that a drilling program at Lake Tanganyika would produce the first continuous Miocen
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- 2020
28. Towards a dendrochronologically refined date of the Laacher See eruption around 13,000 years ago
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Reinig, Frederick, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Jöris, Olaf, Lane, Christine, Nievergelt, Daniel, Oppenheimer, Clive, Park, Cornelia, Pfanz, Hardy, Riede, Felix, Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich, Street, Martin, Wacker, Lukas, Büntgen, Ulf, Reinig, Frederick, Cherubini, Paolo, Engels, Stefan, Esper, Jan, Guidobaldi, Giulia, Jöris, Olaf, Lane, Christine, Nievergelt, Daniel, Oppenheimer, Clive, Park, Cornelia, Pfanz, Hardy, Riede, Felix, Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich, Street, Martin, Wacker, Lukas, and Büntgen, Ulf
- Abstract
Highlights • Previous age estimates of the Laacher See Eruptions (LSE) around 12,900 years are still diverging and imprecise. • The combination of dendrochronology, wood anatomy, and 14C measurements holds the potential to establish a precise LSE date. • An absolute calendric date of the LSE would improve the synchronization of European Late Glacial to Holocene archives. Abstract The precise date of the Laacher See eruption (LSE), central Europe’s largest Late Pleistocene volcanic event that occurred around 13,000 years ago, is still unknown. Here, we outline the potential of combined high-resolution dendrochronological, wood anatomical and radiocarbon (14C) measurements, to refine the age of this major Plinian eruption. Based on excavated, subfossil trees that were killed during the explosive LSE and buried under its pyroclastic deposits, we describe how a firm date of the eruption might be achieved, and how the resulting temporal precision would further advance our understanding of the environmental and societal impacts of this event. Moreover, we discuss the relevance of an accurate LSE date for improving the synchronization of European terrestrial and lacustrine Late Glacial to Holocene archives.
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- 2020
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29. ICDP workshop on the Lake Tanganyika Scientific Drilling Project: A late Miocene-present record of climate, rifting, and ecosystem evolution from the world's oldest tropical lake
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Russell, James, Barker, P A, Cohen, Andrew S, Ivory, Sarah J, Kimirei, I A, Lane, Christine S, Leng, Melanie J., Maganza, Neema, McGlue, Michael Matthew, Msaky, Emma S, Noren, Anders J, Boush, Lisa Park, Salzburger, Walter, Scholz, Christopher A, Tiedemann, Ralph, Nuru, Shaidu, Albrecht, Christian, Ali, Rahma, Arrowsmith, Ramón Ja, Asanga, Danstan, Asmerom, Yemane, Bakundukize, Charles, Bauersachs, Thorsten, Beck, Catherine C, Berke, Melissa A, Beverley, Emily, Blaauw, Martin, Brown, Erik T, Campisano, Christopher J, Carrapa, Bárbara, Castaûeda, Isla, Dee, Sylvia G, Deino, Alan L, Ebinger, Cynthia J, Ellis, Geoffrey S, Foerster, Verena E, Fontijn, Karen, Gehrels, George E, Indemaur, Adrian, Jovanovska, Elena, Junginger, Annett, Kaboth, Stefanie, Kallmeyer, Jens, King, John W, Konecky, Bronwen L, Mark, Darren F, McIntyre, Peter B, Michel, Ellinor, Mkuu, Doreen, Morgan, Leah, Mtetela, Cassy, Muderwha, Nshombo, Muirhead, James D, Mumbi, Cassian T, Muschick, Mo, Nahimana, David, Ngowi, Venosa, Njiko, Pashcal, Nkenyeli, Simon, Nkotagu, Hudson H, Ntakimazi, Gaspard, Oppo, Davide, Purkamo, Lotta, Rick, Jessica A, Roberts, Helen M, Ronco, Fabrizia, Sangweni, Charles, Shaghude, Yohanna W, Shigela, Josephat, Shillington, Donna J, Sophia, Chen Shuang, Sier, Mark Jan, Soreghan, Michael James, Spanbauer, Trisha L, Spencer-Jones, Charlotte L, Staff, Richard A, Stone, Jeffery R, Todd, Jonathan A, Trauth, Martin H, Van Bocxlaer, Bert, Viehberg, Finn A, Vogel, Hendrik, Vonhof, Hubert, Wolff, Christian, Wu, Qinglong, Yost, Chad L, Zeeden, Christian, Russell, James, Barker, P A, Cohen, Andrew S, Ivory, Sarah J, Kimirei, I A, Lane, Christine S, Leng, Melanie J., Maganza, Neema, McGlue, Michael Matthew, Msaky, Emma S, Noren, Anders J, Boush, Lisa Park, Salzburger, Walter, Scholz, Christopher A, Tiedemann, Ralph, Nuru, Shaidu, Albrecht, Christian, Ali, Rahma, Arrowsmith, Ramón Ja, Asanga, Danstan, Asmerom, Yemane, Bakundukize, Charles, Bauersachs, Thorsten, Beck, Catherine C, Berke, Melissa A, Beverley, Emily, Blaauw, Martin, Brown, Erik T, Campisano, Christopher J, Carrapa, Bárbara, Castaûeda, Isla, Dee, Sylvia G, Deino, Alan L, Ebinger, Cynthia J, Ellis, Geoffrey S, Foerster, Verena E, Fontijn, Karen, Gehrels, George E, Indemaur, Adrian, Jovanovska, Elena, Junginger, Annett, Kaboth, Stefanie, Kallmeyer, Jens, King, John W, Konecky, Bronwen L, Mark, Darren F, McIntyre, Peter B, Michel, Ellinor, Mkuu, Doreen, Morgan, Leah, Mtetela, Cassy, Muderwha, Nshombo, Muirhead, James D, Mumbi, Cassian T, Muschick, Mo, Nahimana, David, Ngowi, Venosa, Njiko, Pashcal, Nkenyeli, Simon, Nkotagu, Hudson H, Ntakimazi, Gaspard, Oppo, Davide, Purkamo, Lotta, Rick, Jessica A, Roberts, Helen M, Ronco, Fabrizia, Sangweni, Charles, Shaghude, Yohanna W, Shigela, Josephat, Shillington, Donna J, Sophia, Chen Shuang, Sier, Mark Jan, Soreghan, Michael James, Spanbauer, Trisha L, Spencer-Jones, Charlotte L, Staff, Richard A, Stone, Jeffery R, Todd, Jonathan A, Trauth, Martin H, Van Bocxlaer, Bert, Viehberg, Finn A, Vogel, Hendrik, Vonhof, Hubert, Wolff, Christian, Wu, Qinglong, Yost, Chad L, and Zeeden, Christian
- Abstract
The Neogene and Quaternary are characterized by enormous changes in global climate and environments, including global cooling and the establishment of northern high-latitude glaciers. These changes reshaped global ecosystems, including the emergence of tropical dry forests and savannahs that are found in Africa today, which in turn may have influenced the evolution of humans and their ancestors. However, despite decades of research we lack long, continuous, well-resolved records of tropical climate, ecosystem changes, and surface processes necessary to understand their interactions and influences on evolutionary processes. Lake Tanganyika, Africa, contains the most continuous, long continental climate record from the mid-Miocene (∼ 10 Ma) to the present anywhere in the tropics and has long been recognized as a top-priority site for scientific drilling. The lake is surrounded by the Miombo woodlands, part of the largest dry tropical biome on Earth. Lake Tanganyika also harbors incredibly diverse endemic biota and an entirely unexplored deep microbial biosphere, and it provides textbook examples of rift segmentation, fault behavior, and associated surface processes. To evaluate the interdisciplinary scientific opportunities that an ICDP drilling program at Lake Tanganyika could offer, more than 70 scientists representing 12 countries and a variety of scientific disciplines met in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in June 2019. The team developed key research objectives in basin evolution, source-to-sink sedimentology, organismal evolution, geomicrobiology, paleoclimatology, paleolimnology, terrestrial paleoecology, paleoanthropology, and geochronology to be addressed through scientific drilling on Lake Tanganyika. They also identified drilling targets and strategies, logistical challenges, and education and capacity building programs to be carried out through the project. Participants concluded that a drilling program at Lake Tanganyika would produce the first continuous Mioce, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2020
30. Human occupation of northern India spans the Toba super-eruption ~74,000 years ago
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Clarkson, Christopher J, Harris, Clair, Li, Bo, Neudorf, Christina, Roberts, Richard G, Lane, Christine, Norman, Kasih, Pal, Jagannath, Jones, Sacha, Shipton, Ceri, Koshy, Jinu, Gupta, M, Mishra, D, Dubey, A, Boivin, Nicole, Petraglia, Michael, Clarkson, Christopher J, Harris, Clair, Li, Bo, Neudorf, Christina, Roberts, Richard G, Lane, Christine, Norman, Kasih, Pal, Jagannath, Jones, Sacha, Shipton, Ceri, Koshy, Jinu, Gupta, M, Mishra, D, Dubey, A, Boivin, Nicole, and Petraglia, Michael
- Abstract
© 2020, Crown. India is located at a critical geographic crossroads for understanding the dispersal of Homo sapiens out of Africa and into Asia and Oceania. Here we report evidence for long-term human occupation, spanning the last ~80 thousand years, at the site of Dhaba in the Middle Son River Valley of Central India. An unchanging stone tool industry is found at Dhaba spanning the Toba eruption of ~74 ka (i.e., the Youngest Toba Tuff, YTT) bracketed between ages of 79.6 ± 3.2 and 65.2 ± 3.1 ka, with the introduction of microlithic technology ~48 ka. The lithic industry from Dhaba strongly resembles stone tool assemblages from the African Middle Stone Age (MSA) and Arabia, and the earliest artefacts from Australia, suggesting that it is likely the product of Homo sapiens as they dispersed eastward out of Africa.
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- 2020
31. Lake sediments with Azorean tephra reveal ice-free conditions on coastal northwest Spitsbergen during the Last Glacial Maximum
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van der Bilt, Willem G. M., primary and Lane, Christine S., additional
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- 2019
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32. Age of the oldest known Homo sapiensfrom eastern Africa
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Vidal, Céline M., Lane, Christine S., Asrat, Asfawossen, Barfod, Dan N., Mark, Darren F., Tomlinson, Emma L., Tadesse, Amdemichael Zafu, Yirgu, Gezahegn, Deino, Alan, Hutchison, William, Mounier, Aurélien, and Oppenheimer, Clive
- Abstract
Efforts to date the oldest modern human fossils in eastern Africa, from Omo-Kibish1–3and Herto4,5in Ethiopia, have drawn on a variety of chronometric evidence, including 40Ar/39Ar ages of stratigraphically associated tuffs. The ages that are generally reported for these fossils are around 197 thousand years (kyr) for the Kibish Omo I3,6,7, and around 160–155 kyr for the Herto hominins5,8. However, the stratigraphic relationships and tephra correlations that underpin these estimates have been challenged6,8. Here we report geochemical analyses that link the Kamoya’s Hominid Site (KHS) Tuff9, which conclusively overlies the member of the Omo-Kibish Formation that contains Omo I, with a major explosive eruption of Shala volcano in the Main Ethiopian Rift. By dating the proximal deposits of this eruption, we obtain a new minimum age for the Omo fossils of 233 ± 22 kyr. Contrary to previous arguments6,8, we also show that the KHS Tuff does not correlate with another widespread tephra layer, the Waidedo Vitric Tuff, and therefore cannot anchor a minimum age for the Herto fossils. Shifting the age of the oldest known Homo sapiensfossils in eastern Africa to before around 200 thousand years ago is consistent with independent evidence for greater antiquity of the modern human lineage10.
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- 2022
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33. Humans thrived in South Africa through the Toba eruption about 74,000 years ago
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Smith, Eugene, Jacobs, Zenobia, Johnsen, Racheal, Ren, Minghua, Fisher, Erich C, Oestmo, Simen, Wilkins, Jayne, Harris, Jacob, Karkanas, Panagiotis, Fitch, Shelby, Ciravolo, Amber, Keenan, Deborah, Cleghorn, Naomi, Lane, Christine, Matthews, T, Marean, Curtis W, Smith, Eugene, Jacobs, Zenobia, Johnsen, Racheal, Ren, Minghua, Fisher, Erich C, Oestmo, Simen, Wilkins, Jayne, Harris, Jacob, Karkanas, Panagiotis, Fitch, Shelby, Ciravolo, Amber, Keenan, Deborah, Cleghorn, Naomi, Lane, Christine, Matthews, T, and Marean, Curtis W
- Abstract
Approximately 74 thousand years ago (ka), the Toba caldera erupted in Sumatra. Since the magnitude of this eruption was first established, its effects on climate, environment and humans have been debated1. Here we describe the discovery of microscopic glass shards characteristic of the Youngest Toba Tuff-ashfall from the Toba eruption-in two archaeological sites on the south coast of South Africa, a region in which there is evidence for early human behavioural complexity. An independently derived dating model supports a date of approximately 74 ka for the sediments containing the Youngest Toba Tuff glass shards. By defining the input of shards at both sites, which are located nine kilometres apart, we are able to establish a close temporal correlation between them. Our high-resolution excavation and sampling technique enable exact comparisons between the input of Youngest Toba Tuff glass shards and the evidence for human occupation. Humans in this region thrived through the Toba event and the ensuing full glacial conditions, perhaps as a combined result of the uniquely rich resource base of the region and fully evolved modern human adaptation.
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- 2018
34. ICDP workshop on the Lake Tanganyika Scientific Drilling Project: a late Miocene–present record of climate, rifting, and ecosystem evolution from the world's oldest tropical lake.
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Russell, James M., Barker, Philip, Cohen, Andrew, Ivory, Sarah, Kimirei, Ishmael, Lane, Christine, Leng, Melanie, Maganza, Neema, McGlue, Michael, Msaky, Emma, Noren, Anders, Park Boush, Lisa, Salzburger, Walter, Scholz, Christopher, Tiedemann, Ralph, Nuru, Shaidu, and the Lake Tanganyika Scientific Drilling Project (TSDP) Consortium
- Subjects
TROPICAL dry forests ,GLOBAL environmental change ,CLIMATE change ,GLOBAL cooling ,FOSSIL hominids ,BIODIVERSITY ,BIOSPHERE ,PALEOECOLOGY - Abstract
The Neogene and Quaternary are characterized by enormous changes in global climate and environments, including global cooling and the establishment of northern high-latitude glaciers. These changes reshaped global ecosystems, including the emergence of tropical dry forests and savannahs that are found in Africa today, which in turn may have influenced the evolution of humans and their ancestors. However, despite decades of research we lack long, continuous, well-resolved records of tropical climate, ecosystem changes, and surface processes necessary to understand their interactions and influences on evolutionary processes. Lake Tanganyika, Africa, contains the most continuous, long continental climate record from the mid-Miocene (∼10 Ma) to the present anywhere in the tropics and has long been recognized as a top-priority site for scientific drilling. The lake is surrounded by the Miombo woodlands, part of the largest dry tropical biome on Earth. Lake Tanganyika also harbors incredibly diverse endemic biota and an entirely unexplored deep microbial biosphere, and it provides textbook examples of rift segmentation, fault behavior, and associated surface processes. To evaluate the interdisciplinary scientific opportunities that an ICDP drilling program at Lake Tanganyika could offer, more than 70 scientists representing 12 countries and a variety of scientific disciplines met in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in June 2019. The team developed key research objectives in basin evolution, source-to-sink sedimentology, organismal evolution, geomicrobiology, paleoclimatology, paleolimnology, terrestrial paleoecology, paleoanthropology, and geochronology to be addressed through scientific drilling on Lake Tanganyika. They also identified drilling targets and strategies, logistical challenges, and education and capacity building programs to be carried out through the project. Participants concluded that a drilling program at Lake Tanganyika would produce the first continuous Miocene–present record from the tropics, transforming our understanding of global environmental change, the environmental context of human origins in Africa, and providing a detailed window into the dynamics, tempo and mode of biological diversification and adaptive radiations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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35. Multi-proxy dating of Iceland's major pre-settlement Katla eruption to 822-823 CE
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Büntgen, Ulf, Eggertsson, Ólafur, Wacker, Lukas, Sigl, Michael, Charpentier Ljungqvist, Fredrik, Di Cosmo, Nicola, Plunkett, Gill, Krusic, Paul J., Newfield, Timothy P., Esper, Jan, Lane, Christine, Reinig, Frederick, Oppenheimer, Clive, Büntgen, Ulf, Eggertsson, Ólafur, Wacker, Lukas, Sigl, Michael, Charpentier Ljungqvist, Fredrik, Di Cosmo, Nicola, Plunkett, Gill, Krusic, Paul J., Newfield, Timothy P., Esper, Jan, Lane, Christine, Reinig, Frederick, and Oppenheimer, Clive
- Abstract
Investigations of the impacts of past volcanic eruptions on climate, environment, and society require accurate chronologies. However, eruptions that are not recorded in historical documents can seldom be dated exactly. Here we use annually resolved radiocarbon (C-14) measurements to isolate the 775 CE cosmogenic C-14 peak in a subfossil birch tree that was buried by a glacial outburst flood in southern Iceland. We employ this absolute time marker to date a subglacial eruption of Katla volcano at late 822 CE to early 823 CE. We argue for correlation between the 822-823 CE eruption and a conspicuous sulfur anomaly evident in Greenland ice cores, which follows in the wake of an even larger volcanic signal (ca. 818-820 CE) as yet not attributed to a known eruption. An abrupt summer cooling in 824 CE, evident in tree-ring reconstructions for Fennoscandia and the Northern Hemisphere, suggests a climatic response to the Katla eruption. Written historical sources from Europe and China corroborate our proposed tree ring-radiocarbon-ice core linkage but also point to combined effects of eruptions occurring during this period. Our study describes the oldest precisely dated, high-latitude eruption and reveals the impact of an extended phase of volcanic forcing in the early 9th century. It also provides insight into the existence of prehistoric woodland cover and the nature of volcanism several decades before Iceland's permanent settlement began.
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- 2017
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36. Recurrent explosive eruptions from a high-risk Main Ethiopian Rift volcano throughout the Holocene
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Martin-Jones, Catherine M., Lane, Christine S., Pearce, Nicholas J. G., Smith, Victoria C., Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, Brown, Maxwell C., Frank, Ute, Asrat, Asfawossen, Martin-Jones, Catherine M., Lane, Christine S., Pearce, Nicholas J. G., Smith, Victoria C., Lamb, Henry F., Schaebitz, Frank, Brown, Maxwell C., Frank, Ute, and Asrat, Asfawossen
- Abstract
Corbetti caldera is the southernmost large volcanic system in Ethiopia, and has been categorized at the highest level of uncertainty in terms of hazard and risk. Until now, the number and frequency of past explosive eruptions at Corbetti has been unknown, due to limited studies of frequently incomplete and patchy outcrop sequences. Here we use volcanic ash layers preserved in sediments from three Main Ethiopian Rift lakes to provide the first detailed record of volcanism for the Corbetti caldera. We show that lake sediments yield more comprehensive, stratigraphically resolved dossiers of long-term volcanism than often available in outcrop. Our eruptive history for Corbetti spans the past 10 k.y. and reveals eruptions at an average return period of similar to 900 yr. The threat posed by Corbetti has until now been underestimated. Future explosive eruptions similar to those of the past 10 k.y. would blanket nearby Awassa and Shashamene, currently home to similar to 260,000 people, with pumice-fall deposits, and would have significant societal impacts. A lake sediment tephrostratigraphic approach shows significant potential for application throughout the East African Rift system, and will be essential to better understanding volcanic hazards in this rapidly developing region.
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- 2017
37. Volcanic ash layers illuminate the resilience of Neanderthals and early modern humans to natural hazards
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Lowe, John, Barton, N., Blockley, Simon, Ramsey, C. Bronk, Cullen, Victoria L., Davies, S. W. G., Gamble, Clive, Grant, Katharine, Hardiman, Mark, Housley, Rupert, Lane, Christine S., Lee, Sharen, Lewis, Mark, MacLeod, Alison, Menzies, Martin, Muller, Wolfgang, Pollard, Mark, Price, Catherine, Roberts, Andrew P., Rohling, Eelco J., Satow, Christopher, Smith, V.C., Stringer, C. B., Tomlinson, Emma, White, Dustin, Albert, Paul, Arienzo, Ilenia, Barker, G., Carandente, Antonio, Civetta, Lucia, Farrand, William, Ferrier, Catherine, Gaudelli, Jean-Luc, Karkanas, Panagiotis, Koumouzelis, Margarita, Muller, Ulrich C., Orsi, Giovanni, Pross, Jorg, Rosi, Mauro, Shalamanov-Korobar, Ljiljiana, Sirakov, Nikolay, Tzedakis, Polychronis C., Boric, Dusan, Lowe, J., Barton, N., Blockley, S., Bronk Ramsey, C., Cullen, V. L., Davies, W., Gamble, C., Grant, K., Hardiman, M., Housley, R., Lane, C. S., Lee, S., Lewis, M., Macleod, A., Menzies, M., Müller, W., Pollard, M., Price, C., Roberts, A. P., Rohling, E. J., Satow, C., Smith, V., Stringer, C., Tomlinson, E. L. White D., Albert, P., Arienzo, I., Barker, G., Carandente, A., Civetta, Lucia, Farrand, W., Ferrier, C., Gaudelli, J. L., Karkanas, P., Koumouzelis, M., Muller, U. C., Orsi, G., Pross, J., Rosi, M., Shalamanov Korobar, L., Sirakov, N., Tzedakis, P. C., Borić, D., Department of Geography, University College of London [London] (UCL), Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford [Oxford], Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art [Oxford], Archaeology Department, University of Southampton, Ocean and Earth Science [Southampton], University of Southampton-National Oceanography Centre (NOC), Palaeontology Department, The Natural History Museum [London] (NHM), Department of Earth Sciences [Egham], Royal Holloway [University of London] (RHUL), Research School of Earth Sciences [Canberra] (RSES), Australian National University (ANU), The Natural History Museum, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Palermo, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge [UK] (CAM), Cardiff School of History, Ancient History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardiff University, Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche [Naples], Università degli studi di Napoli Federico II, PPP, De la Préhistoire à l'Actuel : Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie (PACEA), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Ephoreia of Palaeoanthropology-Speleology of Southern Greece, Institute of Geosciences [Frankfurt am Main], Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Universita di Pisa Dip. Scienze Geologiche (UNIV. PISA), University of Pisa - Università di Pisa, National Institution Museum of Macedonia, National Archaeological Institute and Museum (NAIM), and Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS)
- Subjects
Neanderthal ,Human dispersal ,Climate ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,Research Groups and Centres\Earth Sciences\Geochemistry ,Campanian Ignimbrite ,Earliest anatomically modern human ,VOLCANIC ASH ,Tephra ,Neanderthals ,MODERN HUMANS ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Fossils ,Hominidae ,Biological Sciences ,ABRUPT CLIMATE-CHANGE ,Archaeology ,campi Flegrei ,Geology ,010506 paleontology ,Cryptotephra deposits ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,Faculty of Science\Geography ,[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,Population ,Research Groups and Centres\Earth Sciences\Ancient and Modern Earth Systems ,Volcanic Eruptions ,Paleontology ,volcanology ,Natural hazard ,biology.animal ,Commentaries ,Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition ,[SDU.STU.VO]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Volcanology ,Faculty of Science\Earth Sciences ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Vulcanian eruption ,Volcanic eruption ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Research Groups and Centres\Geography\Centre for Quaternary Research ,archeology ,13. Climate action ,Anatomically modern human ,Upper Paleolithic ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Paleolithic Transitions ,Volcanic ash - Abstract
Marked changes in human dispersal and development during the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition have been attributed to massive volcanic eruption and/or severe climatic deterioration. We test this concept using records of volcanic ash layers of the Campanian Ignimbrite eruption dated to ca. 40,000 y ago (40 ka B.P.). The distribution of the Campanian Ignimbrite has been enhanced by the discovery of cryptotephra deposits (volcanic ash layers that are not visible to the naked eye) in archaeological cave sequences. They enable us to synchronize archaeological and paleoclimatic records through the period of transition from Neanderthal to the earliest anatomically modern human populations in Europe. Our results confirm that the combined effects of a major volcanic eruption and severe climatic cooling failed to have lasting impacts on Neanderthals or early modern humans in Europe. We infer that modern humans proved a greater competitive threat to indigenous populations than natural disasters.
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- 2016
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38. Serological Studies On Adult Volunteers Inoculated With Oil-Adjuvant Asian Influenza Vaccine: Report To The M.R.C. Committee On Influenza And Other Respiratory Virus Vaccines
- Author
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Hobson, D., Lane, Christine A., Beare, A. S., and Chivers, C. P.
- Published
- 1964
39. Recurrent explosive eruptions from a high-risk Main Ethiopian Rift volcano throughout the Holocene
- Author
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Martin-Jones, Catherine M., primary, Lane, Christine S., additional, Pearce, Nicholas J.G., additional, Smith, Victoria C., additional, Lamb, Henry F., additional, Schaebitz, Frank, additional, Viehberg, Finn, additional, Brown, Maxwell C., additional, Frank, Ute, additional, and Asrat, Asfawossen, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Multi-proxy dating of Iceland’s major pre-settlement Katla eruption to 822–823 CE
- Author
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Büntgen, Ulf, primary, Eggertsson, Ólafur, additional, Wacker, Lukas, additional, Sigl, Michael, additional, Ljungqvist, Fredrik Charpentier, additional, Di Cosmo, Nicola, additional, Plunkett, Gill, additional, Krusic, Paul J., additional, Newfield, Timothy P., additional, Esper, Jan, additional, Lane, Christine, additional, Reinig, Frederick, additional, and Oppenheimer, Clive, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The RESET project: constructing a European tephra lattice for refined synchronisation of environmental and archaeological events during the last c. 100 ka
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Lowe, John J., Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, Housley, Rupert A., Lane, Christine S., Tomlinson, Emma L., RESET TEAM, (Multiple Authors), and Satow, Christopher
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archaeology ,earth ,geography - Published
- 2015
42. The RESET project: Constructing a European tephra lattice for refined synchronisation of environmental and archaeological events during the last c. 100 ka
- Author
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Lowe, John J, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Housley, Rupert A., Lane, Christine S., Tomlinson, Emma L., Stringer, Chris, Davies, William, Barton, Nick, Pollard, Mark, Gamble, Clive, Menzies, Martin, Rohling, Eelco, Roberts, Andrew, Blockley, Simon, Cullen, Victoria, Grant, Katharine, Lewis, Mark, Macleod, Alison, White, Dustin, Albert, Paul, Hardiman, Mark, Lee, Sharen, Anna, Oh, Satow, Christopher, Cross, Joanna K., Law, Cassian Bramham, Todman, Anna, Bourne, Anna, Matthews, Ian, Müller, Wolfgang, Smith, Victoria, Wulf, Sabine, Anghelinu, M., Antl Weiser, W., Bar Yosef, O., Boric, D., Boscato, P., Ronchitelli, A., Chabai, V., Veselsky, A., Uthmeier, T., Farrand, W., Gjipali, I., Ruka, R., Güleç, E., Karavanic, I., Karkanas, P., King, T., Komšo, D., Koumouzelis, M., Kyparissi, N., Lengyel, G., Mester, Z., Neruda, P., Panagopoulou, E., Shalamanov Korobar, L., Tolevski, I., Sirakov, N., Guadelli, A., Guadelli, J. L., Ferrier, C., Skrdla, P., Slimak, L., Soler, N., Soler, J., Soressi, M., Tushabramishvilii, N., Zilhão, J., Angelucci, D., Albert, P., Bramham Law, C., Cullen, V. L., Lincoln, P., Staff, R., Flower, K., Aouadi Abdeljaouad, N., Belhouchet, L., Barker, G., Bouzouggar, A., Van Peer, P., Kindermann, K., Gerken, K., Niemann, H., Tipping, R., Saville, A., Ward, T., Clausen, I., Weber, M. J., Kaiser, K., Torksdorf, J. F., Turner, F., Veil, S., Nygaard, N., Pyne O'Donnell, S. D. F., Masojc, M., Nalepka, D., Jurochnik, A., Kabacinski, J., Antoine, P., Olive, M., Christensen, M., Bodu, P., Debout, G., Orliac, M., De Bie, M., Van Gils, M., Paulissen, E., Brou, L., Leesch, D., Hadorn, P., Thew, N., Riede, F., Heinen, M., Joris, O., Richter, J., Knipping, M., Stika, H. P., Friedrich, M., Conard, N., Malina, M., Kind, C. J., Beutelspacher, T., Mortensen, M. F., Burdukiewicz, J. M., Szynkiewicz, A., Poltowicz Bobak, M., Bobak, D., Wisniewski, A., Przezdziecki, M., Valde Nowak, P., Muzyczuk, A., Davies, L., Macleod, A., Morgan, P., Aydar, Erkan, Çubukçu, Evren, Brown, Richard, Coltelli, Mauro, Castro, Deborah Lo, Cioni, Raffaello, Derosa, Rosanna, Donato, Paola, Roberto, Alessio Di, Gertisser, Ralf, Giordano, Guido, Branney, Mike, Jordan, Nina, Keller, Jörg, Kinvig, Helen, Gottsman, Jo, Blundy, Jon, Marani, Michael, Orsi, Giovanni, Civetta, Lucia, Arienzo, Ilenia, Carandente, Antonio, Rosi, Mauro, Zanchetta, Giovanni, Seghedi, Ioan, Szakacs, Alex, Sulpizio, Roberto, Thordarson, Thor, Trincardi, Fabio, Vigliotti, Luigi, Asioli, Alesssandra, Piva, Andrea, Andric, M., Brauer, A., de Klerk, P., Filippi, M. L., Finsinger, W., Galovic, L., Jones, T., Lotter, A., Müller, U., Pross, J., Mangerud, J., Lohne, Ø., Pyne O'Donnell, S., Markovic, S., Pini, R., Ravazzi, C., Theuerkauf, M., Tzedakis, C., Margari, V., Veres, D., Wastegård, S., Ortiz, J. E., Torres, T., Díaz Bautista, A., Moreno, A., Valero Garcés, B., Lowick, S., Ottolini, Lusia, John J. Lowe a,, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, B, A, Rupert A. Housley, B, Christine S. Lane, C, Emma L. Tomlinson, Team, Reset, and Giordano, Guido
- Subjects
Archeology ,Environmental change ,Evolution ,Dansgaard–Oeschger and Heinrich events ,Abrupt environmental transitions (AETs) ,Dansgaard-Oeschger and Heinrich events ,Last Glacial stage ,Middle to Upper Palaeolithic ,Tephra database ,Tephra geochemistry ,Volcanic ash isochrons ,Geology ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Archeology (arts and humanities) ,Behavior and Systematics ,Glacial period ,Tephra ,Holocene ,Isochron dating ,Ecology ,Volcanic ash isochron ,Tephra geochemistr ,Quaternary science ,Archaeology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,Dansgaard-Oeschger and Heinrich event ,Mainland ,Physical geography - Abstract
This paper introduces the aims and scope of the RESET project (. RESponse of humans to abrupt Environmental Transitions), a programme of research funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (UK) between 2008 and 2013; it also provides the context and rationale for papers included in a special volume of Quaternary Science Reviews that report some of the project's findings. RESET examined the chronological and correlation methods employed to establish causal links between the timing of abrupt environmental transitions (AETs) on the one hand, and of human dispersal and development on the other, with a focus on the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic periods. The period of interest is the Last Glacial cycle and the early Holocene (c. 100-8 ka), during which time a number of pronounced AETs occurred. A long-running topic of debate is the degree to which human history in Europe and the Mediterranean region during the Palaeolithic was shaped by these AETs, but this has proved difficult to assess because of poor dating control. In an attempt to move the science forward, RESET examined the potential that tephra isochrons, and in particular non-visible ash layers (cryptotephras), might offer for synchronising palaeo-records with a greater degree of finesse. New tephrostratigraphical data generated by the project augment previously-established tephra frameworks for the region, and underpin a more evolved tephra 'lattice' that links palaeo-records between Greenland, the European mainland, sub-marine sequences in the Mediterranean and North Africa. The paper also outlines the significance of other contributions to this special volume: collectively, these illustrate how the lattice was constructed, how it links with cognate tephra research in Europe and elsewhere, and how the evidence of tephra isochrons is beginning to challenge long-held views about the impacts of environmental change on humans during the Palaeolithic. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd., RESET was funded through Consortium Grants awarded by the Natural Environment Research Council, UK, to a collaborating team drawn from four institutions: Royal Holloway University of London (grant reference NE/E015905/1), the Natural History Museum, London (NE/E015913/1), Oxford University (NE/E015670/1) and the University of Southampton, including the National Oceanography Centre (NE/01531X/1). The authors also wish to record their deep gratitude to four members of the scientific community who formed a consultative advisory panel during the lifetime of the RESET project: Professor Barbara Wohlfarth (Stockholm University), Professor Jørgen Peder Steffensen (Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen), Dr. Martin Street (Romisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Neuwied) and Professor Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge University). They provided excellent advice at key stages of the work, which we greatly valued. We also thank Jenny Kynaston (Geography Department, Royal Holloway) for construction of several of the figures in this paper, and Debbie Barrett (Elsevier) and Colin Murray Wallace (Editor-in-Chief, QSR) for their considerable assistance in the production of this special volume.
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- 2015
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43. The impact and significance of tephra deposition on a Holocene forest environment in the North Cascades, Washington, USA.
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Egan, Joanne, Fletcher, William, J., Allott, Tim, E.H., Lane, Christine, S., Blackford, Jeff, J., Clark, Douglas, H., Egan, Joanne, Fletcher, William, J., Allott, Tim, E.H., Lane, Christine, S., Blackford, Jeff, J., and Clark, Douglas, H.
- Abstract
High-resolution palaeoecological analyses (stratigraphy, tephra geochemistry, radiocarbon dating, pollen and ordination) were used to reconstruct a Holocene vegetation history of a watershed in the Pacific Northwest of America to evaluate the effects and duration of tephra deposition on a forest environment and the significance of these effects compared to long-term trends. Three tephra deposits were detected and evaluated: MLF-T158 and MLC-T324 from the climactic eruption of Mount Mazama, MLC-T480 from a Late Pleistocene eruption of Mount Mazama and MLC-T485 from a Glacier Peak eruption. Records were examined from both the centre and fringe of the basin to elucidate regional and local effects. The significance of tephra impacts independent of underlying long-term trends was confirmed using partial redundancy analysis. Tephra deposition from the climactic eruption of Mount Mazama approximately 7600 cal. years BP caused a significant local impact, reflected in the fringe location by changes to open habitat vegetation (Cyperaceae and Poaceae) and changes in aquatic macrophytes (Myriophyllum spicatum, Potamogeton, Equisetum and the alga Pediastrum). There was no significant impact of the climactic Mazama tephra or other tephras detected on the pollen record of the central core. Changes in this core are potentially climate driven. Overall, significant tephra fall was demonstrated through high resolution analyses indicating a local effect on the terrestrial and aquatic environment, but there was no significant impact on the regional forest dependent of underlying environmental changes.
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- 2016
44. Comment on 'The Latest on Volcanic Eruptions and Climate'
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Johnson, Thomas C and Lane, Christine S
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- 2014
45. The RESET project:constructing a European tephra lattice for refined synchronisation of environmental and archaeological events during the last c. 100 ka
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Lowe, John J., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Housley, Rupert A., Lane, Christine S., Tomlinson, Emma L., Noe-Nygaard, Nanna, Lowe, John J., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Housley, Rupert A., Lane, Christine S., Tomlinson, Emma L., and Noe-Nygaard, Nanna
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- 2015
46. Was the 12.1 ka Icelandic Vedde Ash one of a kind?
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Lane, Christine S, Blockley, Simon PE, Mangerud, Jan, Smith, Victoria C, Lohne, {\O}ystein Strand, Tomlinson, Emma L, Matthews, Ian P, and Lotter, Andre F
- Published
- 2012
47. Volcanic ash layers demonstrate resilience of Neanderthal and early Modern Humans to natural hazards
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Lowe, John, Barton, Nick, Blockley, Simon, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Cullen, Victoria L., Davies, William, Gamble, Clive, Grant, Katharine, Hardiman, Mark, Housley, Rupert, Lane, Christine S, Lee, Sharen, Lewis, Mark, Ferrier, Catherine, Guadelli, Jean-Luc, Royal Holloway [University of London] (RHUL), University of Oxford [Oxford], University of Southampton, University of Cambridge [UK] (CAM), The Natural History Museum [London] (NHM), Institut de Préhistoire et de Géologie du Quaternaire (IPGQ), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), De la Préhistoire à l'Actuel : Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie (PACEA), and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Bordeaux (UB)
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préhistoire ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
International audience
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- 2012
48. The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
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Lane, Christine S., Andrič, Maja, Cullen, Victoria L., and Blockley, Simon P E
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Global and Planetary Change ,Vedde ash ,Geology ,Tephrochronology ,Tephrostratigraphy ,Neapolitan yellow tuff ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction - Abstract
The discovery of sites preserving tephra layers from multiple volcanic centres is key to constructing a single European tephrostratigraphic framework for the Late Quaternary. Until now, the tephrostratigraphy of Europe has been divided into two halves: sites in the North Atlantic and northern Europe regions link the Icelandic, Eifel, and the Massif Central volcanic histories; whilst sites in southern Europe record the sequence of tephra layers produced by circum-Mediterranean volcanic provinces. The missing link, able to tie together these two halves, is found in the tephrostratigraphic record of Lake Bled, Slovenia.Lake Bled, in the Julian Alps, Slovenia, holds a high resolution multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental archive for the Lateglacial of south-central Europe. Cryptotephra investigations have revealed three tephra layers: two closely spaced within Younger Dryas stadial sediments and one shortly after the start of the Bølling-Allerød interstadial warming. Two of the tephra layers (Bld_T120 and Bld_T240) are of Campanian origin and are correlated to deposits of the Pomici Principali (PP) and Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) eruptions, respectively. The third layer (Bld_T122) correlates to the Icelandic Vedde Ash (VA), extending the known fallout of this widespread marker layer farther to the southeast.The Lake Bled record also allows the stratigraphic relationship and relative ages of the VA and the PP eruption to be discerned for the first time. Whilst existing numerical age estimates for these two deposits are indistinguishable within errors, their close occurrence in the same lacustrine sediment sequence shows that the VA was erupted shortly prior to the PP eruption.The tephrostratigraphy of Lake Bled developed here helps us to tie together regional volcanic stratigraphies into a broader, continental-scale lattice of sites, with the potential to allow the transfer of dates between remote sequences and the construction of relative chronologies, beneficial in particular for environmental and archaeological research. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
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- 2011
49. Cryptotephra from the 74 ka BP Toba super-eruption in the Billa Surgam caves, southern India
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Lane, Christine, Haslam, Michael, Petraglia, Michael, Ditchfield, Peter, Smith, Victoria, and Korisettar, Ravi
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Indian Middle Palaeolithic ,Caves ,Global and Planetary Change ,Geology ,Tephrochronology ,Pleistocene archaeology ,Youngest Toba Tuff ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The ∼74 ka BP Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT), from the largest known Quaternary volcanic eruption, has been found for the first time as a non-visible (crypto-) tephra layer within the Billa Surgam caves, southern India. The occurrence of the YTT layer in Charnel House Cave provides the first calendrical age estimate for this much debated Pleistocene faunal sequence and demonstrates the first successful application of cryptotephrochronology within a cave sequence. The YTT layer lies ∼50 cm below a major sedimentological change, which is related to global cooling around the MIS 5 to MIS 4 transition. Using this isochronous event layer the Billa Surgam Cave record can be directly correlated with other archaeological sites in peninsular India and palaeoenvironmental archives across southern Asia. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
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- 2011
50. Icelandic tephrochronology - matching the provenance of proximal and distal volcanic glasses using La-ICPMS trace element data
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Menzies, Martin, Tomlinson, E., Muller, Wolfgang, Thordarson, T., Lane, Christine, Smith, Vicky, Blockley, S., Department of Earth Sciences [Egham], Royal Holloway [University of London] (RHUL), University of Edinburgh, Research Laboratory for Archaeology & the History of Art, Department of Geography, University College of London [London] (UCL), and UnivBrestBU, AdminHAL
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[SDE.MCG] Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,[SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry ,[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,[SDU.STU.GC] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry - Abstract
Thorarinsson (1944) pioneered the use of tephrochronology and its application in NW Europe. The basis of this chronological tool is the use of time-parallel marker tephra (i.e., ash
- Published
- 2010
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