Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

WoldeGabriel G., Endale T., White T. D., Thouveny Nicolas, Hart W. K., Renne P. R., Asfaw B. (2013). The role of tephra studies in African paleoanthropology as Hakoma Tuff. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 77, p. 41-58. ISSN 1464-343X.

Titre du document
The role of tephra studies in African paleoanthropology as Hakoma Tuff
Année de publication
2013
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000312173800005
Auteurs
WoldeGabriel G., Endale T., White T. D., Thouveny Nicolas, Hart W. K., Renne P. R., Asfaw B.
Source
Journal of African Earth Sciences, 2013, 77, p. 41-58 ISSN 1464-343X
Beginning in the 1960s, geological and paleoanthropological exploration of the Ethiopian rift system's basins have led to the discovery and assembly of the most comprehensive record of human biological and technological change during the last 6 million years. The hominid fossils, including partial skeletons, were primarily discovered in the Afar Rift, the Main Ethiopian Rift, and in the Omo Basin of the broadly rifted zone of SW Ethiopia. The paleoanthropological research areas within the SW Afar Rift that have yielded many diverse hominid species and the oldest stone tools are, from north to south, Woranso-Mille (aff. Ardipithecus and Au. afarensis), Hadar (Au. afarensis, Homo sp.), Dikika (Au. afarensis), Gona (Ar. kadabba, Ar. ramidus, H. erectus, and oldest stone tools), Middle Awash (Ar. kadabba, Ar. ramidus, Au. anamensis, Au. afarensis, Au. garhi, H. erectus, H. rhodesiensis, H. sapiens idaltu, and the oldest paleo-butchery locality), and Galili (Au. afarensis). Additional hominid remains were discovered at Melka Kunture on the banks of the Awash River near its source along the western margin of the central part of the Main Ethiopian Rift (H. erectus), at Konso (H. erectus and A. boisei), and at the southern end of the MER, and in the Omo Basin (Au. anamensis, Au. afarensis, Au. aethiopicus, Au. boisei, H. habilis, and H. erectus). Distal and sometimes proximal tephra units interbedded within fossilifeous sedimentary deposits have become key elements in this work by providing chronological and correlative control and depositional contexts. Several regional tephra markers have been identified within the northern half of the eastern African rift valley in Ethiopia and Kenya, and in marine sediments of the Gulf of Aden Rift and the NW Indian Ocean. Out of the many regional tephra stratigraphic markers that range in age from the early Pliocene (3.97 Ma) to the late Pleistocene (0.16 Ma), the Sidi Hakoma Tuff (SHT) has been more widely identified and thoroughly characterized than any of the others. An age of 3.446 +/- 0.041 Ma was determined on the SHT according to the most recent calibration, and it is the only regional stratigraphic marker whose source has been traced to a buried caldera in the central sector of the Main Ethiopian Rift. This paper describes new SHT occurrences and presents chemical and chronological results in the context of a broader review of the importance of this key marker. Moreover, the geographic distributions, probable dispersal mechanisms, and importance of regional tephra units in determining the tectonic and sedimentological processes in the different rift basins of the eastern African rift valleys are considered. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Plan de classement
Géologie et formations superficielles [064] ; Société, développement social [106]
Description Géographique
ETHIOPIE ; AFAR
Localisation
Fonds IRD
Identifiant IRD
PAR00009790
Contact