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Sci. Dril., 21, 116, 2016 www.sci-dril.net/21/1/2016/ doi:10.5194/sd-21-1-2016 Author(s) 2016. CC Attribution 3.0 License.
A. Cohen1, C. Campisano2, R. Arrowsmith3, A. Asrat4, A. K. Behrensmeyer5, A. Deino6, C. Feibel7,A. Hill8,, R. Johnson1, J. Kingston9, H. Lamb10, T. Lowenstein11, A. Noren12, D. Olago13, R. B. Owen14,R. Potts15, K. Reed2, R. Renaut16, F. Schbitz17, J.-J. Tiercelin18, M. H. Trauth19, J. Wynn20, S. Ivory21,K. Brady12, R. OGrady12, J. Rodysill22,a, J. Githiri23, J. Russell1, V. Foerster19, R. Dommain15,S. Rucina24, D. Deocampo25, J. Russell21, A. Billingsley1, C. Beck26, G. Dorenbeck17, L. Dullo13,D. Feary3, D. Garello2, R. Gromig27, T. Johnson28, A. Junginger29, M. Karanja13, E. Kimburi30,A. Mbuthia31, T. McCartney32, E. McNulty11, V. Muiruri14, E. Nambiro30, E. W. Negash33, D. Njagi13,J. N. Wilson20, N. Rabideaux25, T. Raub34, M. J. Sier35, P. Smith36, J. Urban17, M. Warren37,M. Yadeta4, C. Yost1, and B. Zinaye4
1Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA
2Institute of Human Origins, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA
3School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA
4School of Earth Sciences, Addis Ababa University, 1176, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
5Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC 20013, USA
6Berkeley Geochronology Center, Berkeley, CA 94709, USA
7Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA
8Peabody Museum, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA
9Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA
10Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Aberystwyth, Aberystwyth SY23 3DB, UK
11Department of Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902, USA
12CDSCO and LacCore, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
13Department of Geology, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya
14Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
15Human Origins Program, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC 20013, USA
16Department of Geological Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon SK S7N 5E2, Canada
17Seminar of Physical Geography and Education, University of Cologne, 50931 Cologne, Germany
18CNRS Gosciences Rennes, Universit de Rennes, 35042 Rennes, CEDEX, France
19Institute of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Potsdam, 14476 Potsdam, Germany
20School of Geosciences, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33620, USA
21Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
22LacCore, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
23Department of Physics, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Nairobi, Kenya
24Earth Sciences Department, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya
25Department of Geosciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302, USA
26Department of Geosciences, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY 13323, USA
27Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Cologne, 50674 Cologne, Germany
28Large Lakes Observatory, University of Minnesota-Duluth, Duluth, MN 55812, USA
29Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment, University of Tbingen, 72074 Tbingen, Germany
Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the IODP and the ICDP.
The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project: inferring the environmental context of human evolution from eastern African rift lake deposits
2 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
30National Oil Corporation of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya
31Tata Chemicals Magadi, Magadi, Kenya
32Department of Earth Sciences, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA
33Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA
34Department of Earth Sciences, University of St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9AJ Scotland, UK
35Paleomagnetics Laboratory, Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, 3584 CD Utrecht, the Netherlands
36Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
37ConocoPhillips, Houston, TX 77079, USA
acurrently at: USGS, Reston, VA, USA
deceasedCorrespondence to: A. Cohen ([email protected])
Received: 31 October 2015 Revised: 1 February 2016 Accepted: 4 February 2016 Published: 19 February 2016
Abstract. The role that climate and environmental history may have played in inuencing human evolution has been the focus of considerable interest and controversy among paleoanthropologists for decades. Prior attempts to understand the environmental history side of this equation have centered around the study of outcrop sediments and fossils adjacent to where fossil hominins (ancestors or close relatives of modern humans) are found, or from the study of deep sea drill cores. However, outcrop sediments are often highly weathered and thus are unsuitable for some types of paleoclimatic records, and deep sea core records come from long distances away from the actual fossil and stone tool remains. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) was developed to address these issues. The project has focused its efforts on the eastern African Rift Valley, where much of the evidence for early hominins has been recovered. We have collected about 2 km of sediment drill core from six basins in Kenya and Ethiopia, in lake deposits immediately adjacent to important fossil hominin and archaeological sites. Collectively these cores cover in time many of the key transitions and critical intervals in human evolutionary history over the last 4 Ma, such as the earliest stone tools, the origin of our own genus Homo, and the earliest anatomically modern Homo sapiens. Here we document the initial eld, physical property, and core description results of the 20122014 HSPDP coring campaign.
1 Introduction
The possibility that human evolution has been strongly inuenced by changes in the Earths environmental history, and in particular, its climate history, has been at the forefront of paleoanthropological research for the last 25 years. Few subjects captivate the public interest as much as human evolution and climate change. Today there are compelling scientic and societal needs to clarify the role of climate history in the evolution of our own species, Homo sapiens, and the evolution and extinction of our close relatives (collectively referred to as hominins). Much of the debate about human origins, from the time of the split between the hominins and the ancestors of the African great apes, about 6 Ma, has centered around the fossil record of Africa. This is where the vast majority of hominin fossils > 1 Ma in age have been discovered, and where many important evolutionary transitions in our lineage apparently occurred, such as bipedalism, the use and increasing complexity of stone tools, and increased brain size. Within the African continent, the eastern Rift Valley has been a particularly prominent region for understand-
ing human origins, as its deep tectonic basins have provided a depositional context for the accumulation of fossil hominins and other organisms, as well as a sedimentary record allowing us to both date the fossils and put them in a paleoenvironmental context.
Numerous hypotheses linking both global and regional African climate to hominin evolutionary history have been proposed. Vrba (1985, 1988, 1995) hypothesized that Neo-gene mammalian (including hominin) evolution and extinction occurred in coordinated and relatively rapid turnover pulses triggered by major, directional, global environmental changes, such as the intensication of Northern Hemisphere glaciation. However, mammalian records indicate that the impact of these global mechanisms varied at local and regional levels (Alemseged, 2003; Bobe and Behrensmeyer, 2004; Bobe et al., 2007; Reed, 2008). Other major advances in understanding eastern African paleoclimate (e.g., deMenocal, 1995, 2004; Trauth et al., 2005; Scholz et al., 2007, 2011) have spurred the development of explanatory, dynamic paleoclimate models, as well as alternative models linking paleoclimate and human evolution. Potts (1996;
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meyer et al. (1997) tested Vrbas turnover pulse hypothesis by investigating whether such a pulse occurred in changing mammal communities at 2.8 Ma in the Turkana Basin of northern Kenya, a region with a rich and highly continuous fossil record. They found that species patterns in the Turkana Basin did not follow this global model, and that species turnovers were more prolonged responses to climate change associated with both drier and more variable climatic conditions. Tectonic forcing (Bailey et al., 2011) and extreme environmental perturbations, such as megadroughts (Cohen et al., 2007; Scholz et al., 2007), have also been suggested as potential drivers of early modern human population fragmentation, genetic differentiation, range expansion events, and adaptation (Mellars, 2006). The implications of millennial-scale or even shorter events for early hominin evolution have scarcely been explored as they are poorly resolved in offshore marine records. However, such events were clearly linked to major demographic and population-level changes during the Holocene in Africa (e.g., Kuper and Krpelin, 2006).
Current hypotheses remain difcult to test and there has been an acute need to develop new perspectives and data on the links between global- and basin-scale environmental change, and to relate these specic changes to ecological factors that inuenced hominin evolution. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) was designed to improve understanding of the implications of ecosystem change for hominins in two ways: (1) to provide millennial-scale environmental data at key time periods that correspond to morphological and cultural changes or other perceptible evolutionary events in hominin and other mammalian lineages near locations where hominin fossils have been found, and (2) to compare these data across basins, encompassing multiple paleoanthropological localities, to document local versus regional effects of ecosystem change, and responses to global-scale changes. For the specic case of hominin and large mammal evolution in Africa, in order for a paleoenvironmental record to be useful for improving our understanding of the connection between evolution and climate, it must meet two conditions.
1. There must be a highly resolved paleorecord to examine environmental change at any temporal scale that could realistically serve as an evolutionary or ecological trigger. This would range from annual records of seasonality preserved in archives such as annual lake deposits, pollen records of plants responsive to variable seasonality, lipid markers of temperature, etc. to geochemical or sedimentological records of phenomena such as major uplift or paleoceanographic events, which might operate on much longer (e.g., > 106 years) timescales.
2. A record of faunal change from the same localities that is sufciently detailed to investigate responses to environmental change within particular clades, ecological guilds, or mammal communities.
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 3
Potts and Faith, 2015) proposed that it is the variability in climate (especially at orbital forcing timescales) as opposed to simply its directional history (e.g., drying trends) that has driven large-scale evolutionary changes and technological innovations among the hominins. Unfortunately, because local outcrop paleorecords are either incomplete or discontinuous, no consensus yet exists on the factors that interacted to control African climate and ecosystem dynamics during the Plio-Pleistocene or how they affected hominin or other mammalian evolution.
On long timescales (> 106 years), there is debate on the timing and importance of eastern African uplift and changes in oceanic circulation as causes of climate change, and especially increasing aridity, the development of extensive grassland savanna, and their inuence on the mammalian fauna (Cane and Molnar, 2001; Molnar and Cane, 2007; Sepulchre et al., 2006; Wichura et al., 2010; Cerling et al., 2011;Federov et al., 2013; Maslin et al., 2014). On intermediate timescales (104106 years), there is controversy regarding the relative importance of high-latitude glacial cycles, Walker circulation intensication, and annual- to decadal-scale variability in atmospheric pressure and sea surface temperatures such as El NioSouthern Oscillation and the Indian Ocean Dipole (ENSO/IOD) for regional aridity, lake expansions, and seasonality (deMenocal, 2004; Trauth et al., 2009), all of which could have inuenced the course of evolution in the lake-rich Rift Valley. On Milankovitch ( 100,
40, and 20 kyr) and shorter (101104 years) timescales, there is debate about the role of orbital forcing and high-latitude glacial to millennial-scale events in driving wetdry cycles that increased environmental pressures on African ecosystems (e.g., Larasoaa et al., 2003; Kingston et al., 2007;Scholz et al., 2007; Campisano and Feibel, 2007; Trauth et al., 2009, 2015; Armitage et al., 2011; Blome et al., 2012), and how these might have inuenced resource acquisition (Reed and Rector, 2007) and other ecological parameters affecting hominins. Assessing these hypotheses is complicated by the need to understand the role of biotic drivers of adaptation, such as competition and predation. One fundamental question is whether any of the Earth system drivers can be characterized with sufcient precision to identify drivers of diversication and extinction among our close relatives and ancestors and to enable correlation with hominin evolution.
Past attempts to test hypotheses that implicate climate as a major driver of human evolution have often foundered on a fundamental mismatch of spatial and temporal scales, casting highly temporally resolved, but globally or continentally spatially averaged records of climate change against less temporally resolved but basin-scale records of faunal change and/or hominin evolution. This approach cannot yield a realistic understanding of potential linkages between environmental and biotic change, because it ignores basin-scale environmental dynamics relating to changes in regional climate, that is, local tectonics and geomorphology, which could also be drivers of mammalian population dynamics. For example, Behrens-
4 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
The HSPDP was developed by an international team of over 100 scientists from 11 countries to address these issues.Its goal was the collection and analysis of high-resolution paleoenvironmental records from paleo-lake drill cores near the depocenters of lacustrine basins of signicant paleoanthropological importance in eastern Africa, each of which meets these conditions. As discontinuously exposed outcrops have shown these lakebeds to be commonly laminated (e.g., Wilson et al., 2014) with bedding characteristics often similar to demonstrably annual varves documented in modern African rift lakes (Pilskaln and Johnson, 1991; Cohen et al., 2006) and deposited at high sedimentation rates, their records fulll the rst criterion. The second criterion is fullled as each of the drill sites lies in close proximity to rich and diverse fossil vertebrate and archaeological sites, with sediments of the same age, and which collectively span some of the most critical intervals of hominin evolutionary history (e.g., earliest Homo, earliest stone tools, origin of Acheulian and Middle Stone Age technologies, earliest modern H. sapiens), and where new, important fossils and artifacts are still being recovered. Thus, the integration and direct comparison of basin-scale records of environmental change from cores with the record of faunal and cultural change from outcrops affords us the opportunity to test existing hypotheses of Earth system drivers of evolution at different temporal and spatial scales.
2 Drilling target areas
A series of workshops held in the midlate 2000s better dened the specic goals of the HSPDP and specic selection criteria for ideal drilling locations (Cohen and Umer, 2009;Cohen et al., 2009). The drilling areas (Table 1 and Fig. 1) were decided through a lengthy and interactive process between the principal ICDP project proponents. Numerous hominin fossil and archaeological sites in proximity to lake deposits in eastern Africa were considered as potential drilling targets, and ultimately the decision on which sites to pursue was determined by a combination of the scientic criteria mentioned above, along with practical, logistical considerations, such as site access for a truck-mounted drill rig and probable costs. The sites discussed below were part of the original HSPDP operational plan. The Olorgesailie (Koora Plain) site was ultimately funded separately from the remaining ICDP-supported sites.
2.1 The Northern Awash drilling area, Ethiopia
The Northern Awash basin provides one of the densest accumulations of early hominin fossils (Johanson et al., 1982;Kimbel et al., 2004; Alemseged et al., 2006), as well as rich mammalian faunal and oral records (Bonnelle et al., 2004;Reed, 2008; Geraads et al., 2012). Its lakebeds provide a potential record of the local environmental response to the onset of high-amplitude climate oscillations and increased aridity
Figure 1. Map of eastern Africa showing locations of the HSPDP drilling areas; maximum coring depth for the deepest borehole in red on the map (the BT(227 m) example indicates the maximum depth, 227 m, that was reached at the BT site). The timeline below the map shows the number of cored boreholes, drilling dates, and approximate time intervals covered by the drill cores from each area. From north to south: NA: Northern Awash; CB: Chew Bahir; WT: West Turkana; BT: Baringo Tugen Hills; OL: Olorgesailie/Koora Plain; and MA: Lake Magadi. Base map generated from GeoMapApp.
in eastern Africa at 3.15 Ma as well as the response to Mi
lankovitch cycles prior to the onset of high-latitude glaciation ( 2.7 Ma) as documented in the marine core record
(Campisano and Feibel, 2007). This site provides a backdrop against which 400 kyr of the evolutionary history of Aus
tralopithecus afarensis (e.g., Lucy) and associated fauna and the earliest use of stone tools (McPherron et al., 2010) will be interpreted.
2.2 The Baringo Basin/Tugen Hills drilling area, Kenya
This area of the central Kenyan Rift Valley comprises the most complete late Neogene section known from the African rift (Chapman and Brook, 1978). The stratigraphic interval of the Chemeron Formation targeted here (3.32.6 Ma) contains 100 fossil vertebrate localities, including three ho
minin sites, providing an opportunity to explore the nature of environmental change associated with shifting insolation patterns (for example, documenting the lacustrine response to changing precipitation patterns at precessional, millennial, and perhaps even shorter timescales; e.g., Kingston et al., 2007; Wilson et al., 2014) and to assess specic terrestrial community responses to pervasive, short-term climatic
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 5
Table 1. Borehole site information for the HSPDP. DA: drilling area; age: approximate age range of borehole sediments; NA: Northern Awash, Ethiopia; BTB: Baringo/Tugen Hills, Kenya; WTK: West Turkana, Kenya; SK: southern Kenya; KO: Koora Plain/Olorgesailie; MAG: Lake Magadi; CHB: Chew Bahir, Ethiopia; ID: borehole identication number; SD: spud date; LAT: latitude N (: S); LONG.:
longitude E; BE: borehole surface elevation in meters above sea level; BI: borehole inclination in degrees off vertical; BT: borehole top depth in meters to top of cored interval from surface; DL: drilled length in meters; CL: cored length in meters; CR: total core recovered in meters; CR: percentage core recovery; LOG: downhole logging type; NG: natural gamma (U, Th, K); MS: magnetic susceptibility; R: resistivity; T: temperature. For MAG14-2A, MS was collected from 4 to 14 m and 82 to 197 m only, R from 4.5 to 12.5 m and 82.5 to 139 m, 143 to 161 m and 165 to 197 m only, and MS from 82 to 197 m only. For OLO12-1A the hole was reverse-circulation drilled down to 27 m with cuttings bagged from 0 to 27 m. For OLO12-2A, borehole was reamed to nd bedrock depth (encountered at 159 m). No coring attempted.
Drilling area (age) ID SD LAT. LONG. BE BI BT DL CL CR CR% LOG
NA (Late Pliocene)HSPDP-NAO14-1A 23/2/2014 11.315 40.7369 520 15 1.84 4.84 4.84 2.6 53.7 None
HSPDP-NAO14-1B 23/2/2014 11.315 40.7369 520 13 1.29 187.4 187 205.4 110 None
HSPDP-NAO14-1C 28/2/2014 11.315 40.737 521 13 0 3 3 2.67 88.8 None
HSPDP-NAO14-1D 1/3/2014 11.315 40.737 521 14 0 168.4 167 181.9 109 None
HSPDP-NAO14-1E 4/3/2014 11.315 40.7649 521 13 172.7 0 0 0 0 None
HSPDP-NAW14-1A 11/3/2014 11.325 40.7649 495 12 0 244.5 245 254.6 104 None BTB (Late PlioceneEarly
Pleistocene)HSPDP-BTB13-1A 1/6/2013 0.5546 35.9375 1158 0 5.25 227.9 223 210 94.3 NG, MS,
R, T
WTK (Early Pleistocene)
HSPDP-WTK13-1A 22/6/2013 4.1097 35.8718 404 10 0.55 215.8 215 202.6 94.1 NG, T SK (Middle PleistoceneHolocene)
OLODP-OLO12-1A 5/9/2012 1.791 36.4011 862 0 27 166.1 139 130.8 94 None
ODP-OLO12-2A 17/9/2012 1.7887 36.3968 862 0 159 0 0 0 None
ODP-OLO12-3A 21/9/2012 1.7887 36.4085 852 0 50 116.3 66.3 66.73 101 None
MAGHSPDP-MAG14-1A 11/6/2014 1.8805 36.2717 607 0 3.02 128.5 126 74.51 59.2 None
HSPDP-MAG14-1B 23/6/2014 1.8806 36.2717 607 0 119.64 125.7 6.1 2.87 47 None
HSPDP-MAG14-1C 25/06/2014 1.8806 36.2717 607 0 3.44 136.6 26.5 16.84 63.6 None
HSPDP-MAG14-2A 29/06/2014 1.8516 36.2794 607 0 3 197.4 194 107.7 55.4 NG, MS,
R, MS
CB (MiddleLate Pleistocene)HSPDP-CHB14-1A 18/03/14 4.4225 36.5109 500 0 0 41.5 39.1 39.05 94 None
HSPDP-CHB14-2A 6/11/2014 4.7612 36.7668 500 0 0.49 278.6 284 245.4 86.6 None
HSPDP-CHB14-2B 19/11/2014 4.7613 36.767 500 0 0.28 266.4 266 240.9 90.5 None Totals 2668 2192 1985 90.6
change through the interval of Northern Hemisphere glacial intensication. At this time in eastern Africa we also observe the diversication of Paranthropus (a group of hominins with robust cranial features and large teeth for a strong bite force) and our own genus Homo, as well as the earliest evidence for stone tool-making in nearby West Turkana (Harmand et al., 2015).
2.3 The West Turkana drilling area, Kenya
This area targets the Early Pleistocene lakebeds of Turkana, Kenya, that were deposited during a phase of overall increasing continental aridity punctuated by major lake-level uctuations, which appear to reect insolation-forced climate cycles (Lepre et al., 2007; Joordens et al., 2011). The extensive outcrops of the Turkana Basin have been well character-
ized geologically (Feibel, 2011) and have provided an unparalleled tephrostratigraphic framework (Brown et al., 2006) associated with precise chronostratigraphic controls (Mc-Dougall et al., 2012). This borehole is in direct proximity to the rich fossil record of the Turkana Basin, including 500
hominin fossils and more than 100 archaeological sites (Harris et al., 1988; Roche et al., 2004). The hominins include signicant specimens, such as the earliest/most complete specimens of H. rudolfensis and H. erectus, early members of our own genus. The time window targeted here ( 1.91.4 Ma)
also includes the earliest evidence of Acheulean (e.g., large hand axes) stone tool technology (Lepre et al., 2011) and the interval when hominins rst expanded their range outside of Africa. The core record will allow us to explore whether (and which) climate drivers caused the expansion of grassland habitats in the early Pleistocene in this region, what climatic
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6 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
conditions/changes were associated with the rst appearance of early Homo (H. habilis/rudolfensis) and the emergence ofH. erectus, and what were the temporal links between climate change, the episode of major faunal turnover (i.e., the near-wholesale replacement of one set of species by another), grassland expansion, and the appearance of H. erectus, all occurring shortly after 2 Ma in the Turkana Basin.
2.4 The southern Kenya (Olorgesailie and Lake Magadi) drilling areas
These drill sites comprise contemporaneous Early Pleistocene to modern records from two adjacent (but hydrologically distinct) basins. Drill cores from these localities in the southern Kenya rift may provide a regional equatorial paleo-climate history of the major MiddleLate Pleistocene climate transitions, which is otherwise recorded from this region in only discontinuous records. Drilling on the Koora Plain will allow us to examine deposits immediately adjacent to the Olorgesailie depositional basin, one of the richest, best-calibrated EarlyLate Pleistocene archeological localities in Africa, with abundant Acheulean and Middle Stone Age (MSA) sites (and documenting the transition between these important technological phases of human prehistory), diverse fauna, a detailed paleoenvironmental record, and abundant tephras (e.g., Potts et al., 1999; Sikes et al., 1999; Behrens-meyer et al., 2002; Owen et al., 2008). Prior research here has fueled hypotheses and debates about climateevolution relationships (e.g., Owen et al., 2009a, b; Trauth and Maslin, 2009).
Nearby Lake Magadi ( 20 km from the Koora Plain drill
site) is located in the axis of the southern Kenya Rift and is a regional sump for water and sediments. The present lake, a saline/alkaline pan, is the successor to a series of paleolakes that have occupied the basin since the Early Pleistocene. Previous outcrop and drill core records (none of which survive) established the volcanic and sediment stratigraphy and their linkage to basin hydrology (Baker, 1958; Surdam and Eugster, 1976; Crossley, 1979; Eugster, 1980; Jones et al., 1977).The close proximity of both basins will provide us with an opportunity to tease out climatic from tectonic/groundwater controls on their respective environmental histories, contributing to HSPDP Objective 2 the evaluation of how global climate changes were experienced locally within key hominin locales.
2.5 The Chew Bahir drilling area, Ethiopia
This area comprises MiddleLate Pleistocene lakebeds in a region between the Ethiopian and Omo-Turkana rifts, each of which has a highly distinctive Quaternary biogeographic history (Suwa et al., 2003) and border presumed habitat refuge areas during times of climatic stress (Foerster et al., 2015).Chew Bahir is an ephemeral playa today, but in the past has held a large lake (Foerster et al., 2012). Our records from
Chew Bahir, presumed to cover at least the last 700 kyr, will also provide a regional-scale environmental context for the earliest anatomically modern H. sapiens fossils recovered at
200 ka in the nearby (90 km away) Omo River valley (Day,
1969; McDougall et al., 2005; Brown et al., 2006). When coupled with the other Early Pleistocenerecent HSPDP records from Olorgesailie and Magadi and previously collected drill core records from Lake Malawi and elsewhere in the region, the details of regional environmental heterogeneity in eastern Africa through the extreme climatic uctuations of the Quaternary may be explored (e.g., Blome et al., 2012).
3 Pre-drilling site surveys
Between 2008 and 2012 subsurface and outcrop site survey data were collected in a series of campaigns from all of the drill sites to determine optimal locations for the various boreholes. The objective was to minimize the likelihood of encountering subsurface faults or associated deformation and to maximize stratigraphic resolution. Seismic data were acquired by our group at the Afar, West Turkana and Olorgesailie areas. Additionally, legacy industry seismic data were obtained from an old (1970s) AMOCO survey at West Turkana and very recently acquired survey data from Tullow Oil at the Chew Bahir area. Gravity and magnetic surveys were also conducted by our team at the Magadi and Olorgesailie areas. Prior boreholes drilled by the US Geological Survey in the late 1960s at Lake Magadi provided additional information for that area. Siting at the Baringo Basin/Tugen Hills was based on known outcrop exposures immediately adjacent to the drill site.
4 Drilling and logging operations (Figs. 2 and 3)
Drilling of the HSPDP sites took place over an approximately 2-year period between September 2012 and December 2014.Local drilling contractors, Drilling and Prospecting International for Kenya areas, Addis GeoSystems for the Chew Bahir pilot hole, and Geosearch (now Orezone Drilling) for all other holes in Ethiopia, provided truck-mounted standard wireline diamond coring drill rigs and crews. DOSECC Exploration Services (DES) provided drilling operations oversight, local supervision and specialized lake tools, bits, and other drilling supply procurement for items that were not locally available. Boreholes were drilled using a combination of H (96.3 mm diameter hole, 61.1 mm diameter core), P (122.6 mm hole, 66 mm core), and minor N (75.7 mm hole,47.6 mm core, at Awash) diameter drill string and a variety of coring tools depending on the highly variable lithologic conditions encountered during drilling. P was employed when using the specialized lake coring tools in unconsolidated sediments. These included the hydraulic piston corer, the extended nose non-rotating corer, alien rotating corer, all using standard IODP butyrate core liners. Boreholes were
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 7
Figure 3. HSPDP drilling operations: (a) Lake Magadi drill site (MAG14) in the southern Kenya Rift Valley. Crystalline trona on the dry Magadi pan visible in the foreground (photo A. Cohen); (b) Chew Bahir drill site (CHB14) in the southern Ethiopian Rift Valley, Hammar Range in the background (photo A. Cohen);(c) HSPDP presentation to the local community group by National Museums of Kenya personnel at the Tugen Hills drill site (photo courtesy of National Museums of Kenya); (d) lmmaker Doug Prose of Earth Images Foundation lming tephra outcrops in the Omo River Valley, near the Chew Bahir drill site (photo A. Cohen).
tivity, natural gamma radiation) and MSCL-XYZ (split core, for high-resolution MS and color reectance spectrophotometry) at increments ranging from 0.5 to 4 cm, depending on the parameter. Cores were split in half lengthwise, cleaned, and scanned with a Geotek MSCL-CIS digital linescan core imager. Visual core description, smear slide analysis, and (as needed) SEM-EDS and XRD analyses were performed, and subsamples were extracted according to coordinated plans for stratigraphically equivalent samples for all analytical parameters.
5 Initial coring and core description results
In total, 18 boreholes were drilled in the HSPDP (Table 1), although several of these were deadman anchoring holes to secure the drill rig and not intended for core recovery. Approximately 2 km of core was recovered from about 2200 m of cored intervals, for an average recovery of 90.5 %. The
only area where recovery was signicantly below this average was at the Lake Magadi site, where interbedded hard and soft lithologies (cherts and unconsolidated muds) made for extremely challenging coring conditions.
Six boreholes were drilled at the Northern Awash area from two sites (NAO/Osi Isi and NAW/Woranso, Fig. 2a), which yielded approximately 650 m of core. The longest single borehole was 244 m (NAW-1A), but, because of the
offset between the stratigraphically higher top of NAO (about 25 m above the top of NAW) we estimate the total strati-
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Figure 2. HSPDP drilling operations: (a) Oso Isi drill site (NAO14) in the Northern Awash area, northern Ethiopia (photo C. Camp-isano); (b) West Turkana (WTK13) drill site, with Lake Turkana and North Island in the background (photo A. Cohen); (c) West Turkana drill site (photo A. Noren); (d) Koora Plain/Olorgesailie (OLO12-1A drill site with Mt. Olorgesailie in the background (photo R. Dommain).
oriented at 1015 off the vertical at the Northern Awash and West Turkana sites to facilitate the interpretation of paleo-magnetic data sets. At the Tugen Hills site, the existing 20
dip of sediments at the borehole site allowed us to drill vertically. At the three remaining sites (Magadi, Olorgesailie, and Chew Bahir) the presence of unconsolidated sediments made drilling at a non-vertical angle impractical, because the risk of cave-ins and losing hole integrity was deemed to outweigh the advantages for the paleomagnetic data interpretation. A Reex ACT III orientation device was deployed with each drive at the West Turkana and Northern Awash sites to determine azimuthal data on non-vertical boreholes. Geophysical down-hole logging data were collected by ICDPs Operational Support Group for natural gamma, magnetic susceptibility (MS), resistivity, borehole temperature and azimuthal direction at three of the Kenyan sites (Tugen Hills/Baringo, West Turkana and Lake Magadi). Logging was limited at the West Turkana borehole because of lost casing remaining in the hole at the time of logging. No down-hole logging was conducted at the remaining sites due to unforeseen circumstances. A multisensor core logger (MSCL, Geotek Ltd.) was deployed to the Tugen Hills/Baringo and West Turkana sites to collect MS data on unsplit cores during drilling, but the MSCL was not available for the remaining sites.
After drilling each site, cores were shipped via airfreight to LacCore, the National Lacustrine Core Facility (University of Minnesota) for full scanning, processing, description, and subsampling. Physical properties for cores from all sites were analyzed in detail via MSCL-S (whole core, for p wave velocity, gamma density, loop MS, non-contact electrical resis-
8 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
Key to all lithologic symbols
Core color Lithology Grey Scale-25
MS-25 XYZ Gamma-25 (g/cm3)
MBS
7a.
Figure 5. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-NAO14-1B, from the Oso Isi locality, Northern Awash drilling area, northern Ethiopia, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy (from XYZ spectrophotometric imaging data, adjusted in Photoshop to using Image Adjustment Levels to maximize color range). Basalt intervals were not imaged and are shown as solid black and missing core intervals are shown in white; lithologic log, rendered in PSICAT. See Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated. Zones with missing cores are indicated by blank intervals. Letter/number markers and arrows to the left of the lithologic log indicate the position of corresponding core photos in Fig. 7 for this and other summary stratigraphy gures; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data from the LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data on split core segments, measured at 0.5 cm increments. Data have been smoothed (25-point running mean smooth, hence MS-25, Gamma-25, and Grey Scale-25); composite of induced gamma density log data at0.5 cm increments from the LacCore Geotek Multisensor Core Logger (MSCL). Spurious values (< 1.4 gm cm3) caused by coring gaps have been removed prior to analysis and plotting. Data have been smoothed (25-point running mean); composite of spec-trophotometric grey-scale log data at 0.5 cm increments from the LacCore Geotek XYZ spectrophotometric sensor. Data have been smoothed (25-point running mean).
Figure 4. Key to all lithologic symbols. Note that blank (white) areas in lithologic columns indicate zones of missing core, i.e., no core recovery.
graphic interval covered by the two sites to be approximately 270 m. Boreholes consisted of three primary science bore-holes inclined 1315 , plus two cored anchoring holes and one uncored hole, all of which were drilled in February
March 2014. Thick basalt sections were encountered at both sites (some of which appear to be compound ows), which are separated by about 3 km. Sediments at both drill sites are gently dipping ( 2 NE). The two longest cores (NAO-1B,
Fig. 5 and NAW-1A, Fig. 6) consist of primarily massive or laminated, brown or greenish brown silty clays, with occasional sandy units scattered through the core, particularly associated with the upper basalt (Fig. 7a, b). Diatomites occur sporadically, mostly in the upper portions of both cores, with diatomaceous units more abundant below the second basalt. Thin (mmcm) unaltered airfall volcanic ashes occur throughout the core. Most of the pronounced low-MS and low gamma density zones consist of either diatomites or ne, greenish clays. The brown clays contain abundant pale-osol nodules and occasional beds of gastropods. Drilling at both the NAO and NAW localities was terminated when advancing the holes became impractical as rods became stuck
because of very tight hole conditions, very high torque, and water pressure.
A single, vertical 228 m borehole was drilled at the Tu
gen Hills site in MayJune 2013 (Fig. 8). The borehole was situated in very close proximity to exposures of variably dipping (2042 in the borehole) cyclic diatomites and mud-stones of the upper Chemeron Formation, which had previously been shown by Deino et al. (2006) and Kingston et al. (2007) to reect extreme precessional climate variability in the central Kenyan Rift during the Plio-Pleistocene transition. The lower 100 m of the core is coarser on average
than the upper part of the core. From the base to 130 m b.s.
the core contains frequent channelized granular sands and conglomerate beds (often reddish in color), alternating with carbonate nodular paleosol siltstones (Fig. 7c), with sparse
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 9
MBS
Core color Grey Scale-25
Gamma-25 (g/cm3)
Lithology
ules indicative of episodic exposure and pedogenesis. Above 61 m b.s., a pronounced lithologic transition occurs towards coarser sediments (more frequent sandy intervals), which is also reected in changes in the color and magnetic susceptibility of the core. Soil structure and nodular carbonates occur in these sediments as well. Tuffs occur as discrete horizons at several depths within the core, which at this locality will be critical for tephrostratigraphic correlation with nearby out-crops. Drilling was terminated at this site when borehole instability, high torque, and high-pressure groundwater caused an inability for the drilling to advance. Bottom hole temperatures also began to rise abruptly near the base of the hole, indicating a potential hydrothermal hazard.
Three vertical boreholes were drilled (and two cored) at the northern end of the Koora Plain, in the southern Kenya Rift Valley, 22 km SSW of the Olorgesailie archaeological
site in SeptemberOctober 2012 (Figs. 2d, 10, and 11). Because the DOSECC soft sediment tools were not available at this time, the upper, unconsolidated sediments of both bore-holes were auger drilled and cuttings were bagged at Site 1.Excellent core recovery was achieved at both sites below the augered intervals (Table 1 and Figs. 10 and 11). Both cores consist of at-lying, interbedded muds (laminated in part), diatomites, and ne to coarse sands, with some pumice-rich gravel and conglomerate intervals and infrequent carbonate marls as well. Numerous tuffs are also present. Both cores bottomed in the trachyte basement that underlies the basin at depths of 166 and 116 m for Sites 1 and 3, respectively.
Four vertical boreholes at two sites were drilled into at-lying sediments at Lake Magadi in June 2014, and downhole logs were made in the single borehole at Site 2 (Figs. 3a, 12, 13). Unlike other sites, it was necessary to drill from a raised pad at Lake Magadi, because the surface trona crust was inundated and soft from recent rains. A custom-built pad was constructed by the project for Site 1 adjacent to the main causeway crossing the lake, whereas Site 2 took advantage of a wide area along another existing elevated roadbed on the playa. Also in contrast to the other drilling targets, the Lake Magadi sediments consist of large proportions of trona (Fig. 7f) and other Na carbonates and chert (Fig. 7g, as well as both laminated (Fig. 7h) and massive lacustrine muds.Muds, mudstones, and cherts in varying proportions dominate the lower stratigraphic intervals at both sites, whereas the upper portion at both sites is a 3040 m thick sequence of trona and trona-bearing muds, the production target for Tata Chemicals, our local industry partner for this drill site.The upper trona was drilled using freshwater as the drilling uid in the initial holes because bentonite drilling mud would not mix with the high-pH brines readily available near the site. However, this strategy proved problematic because dissolution cavities formed around the borehole, undermining site stability. For boreholes 1C and 2A drilling used only the high-pH lake brine without bentonite, which ultimately proved satisfactory because the high density of the brine was sufcient to raise the cuttings. The alternation of soft and
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MS-25 XYZ
7b
Figure 6. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-NAW14-1A, from the Woranso locality, Northern Awash drilling area, northern Ethiopia, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.4 gm cm3 removed); composite of spectrophoto-metric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
lacustrine muds and diatomites. Above this, diatomite lacustrine/terrestrial cycles similar to those seen in outcrop begin to appear (evident in both the lithologies and physical properties of the upper portion of the drill core, Fig. 7d). Low-density, low-magnetic-susceptibility sediments (light colored lacustrine diatomites and clays) alternate with more strongly magnetically susceptible and denser siliciclastic muds (paleosols, often with abundant carbonate nodules) and uvial sands (and occasional gravels) in the upper 130 m of the core. Sediments above 50 m b.s. are generally lighter in color
(note grey-scale data, Fig. 8), which may reect near-surface weathering/alteration above the local water table. Numerous primary and reworked tephras occur throughout the core, which will be critical for dating the core. Drilling was terminated at this site close to the original planned target depth (250 m) for budgetary reasons.
A single, oriented (10 from vertical) 216 m borehole
was drilled at the West Turkana (WTK) site in JuneJuly 2013 (Figs. 2c, d and 9). The drill site was chosen to be in close proximity to outcrop exposures of the correlative Nachukui Formation, which is locally dipping at 5 W. The
lower 155 m (61216 m b.s.) of the core consists of lam
inated to massive green and brown clays, which are often fossiliferous (sh, ostracodes and molluscs, the latter often organized as discrete shell lags) (Fig. 7e). Many of these lacustrine clays contain paleosol structure and carbonate nod-
10 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
(a) (f)
(b) (g)
(c) (h)
(d) (i)
(e) (j)
Figure 7. Representative lithologies found in HSPDP drill cores. Positions of each photo within the cores are indicated on the respective summary stratigraphy diagrams. NAO14-1B-66Q-1 (154.66155.07 m below surface m b.s.) from the Northern Awash Oso Isi site, northern Ethiopia. Note: many coring gaps in NAO14-1B are inlled by matching to the twinned borehole NAO14-1D (not illustrated), collected immediately adjacent to this core. Laminated green lake clays with soft sediment deformation. NAW14-1A-71Q-2 (138.60139.06 m b.s.) from the Northern Awash Woranso site. Massive brown, silty, diatomaceous clay. BTB13-1A-52Q-2 (150.21150.71 m b.s.) from the Baringo-Tugen Hills site, central Kenya. Well-developed paleosol with carbonate nodules. BTB13-1A-3Q-1 (9.8510.35 m b.s.) from the Baringo-Tugen Hills site. Laminated diatomite with carbonate interbeds. WTK13-1A-63Q-1 (150.16150.66 m b.s.) from the West Turkana drill site, northern Kenya. Green silty clays with mollusc coquinas. MAG14-2A-9Y-1 (19.5820.08 m b.s.) from Lake Magadi, southern Kenya. Interbedded trona and thin muds. MAG14-1A-49Y-1 (75.0275.52 m b.s.) Interbedded black silty clay and yellow/black chert. MAG14-2A-67Y-1 (147.10147.60 m b.s.) from Lake Magadi. Laminated muds. CHB14-2A-35A-2A (73.2273.72 m b.s.) partly laminated green and brown muds from the Chew Bahir Basin. CHB14-2A-70Q-1A (146.58147.05 m b.s.) brown, mollusk-bearing massive mudstones from the Chew Bahir Basin.
lithied muds and cherts (often on a sub-meter depth scale) proved a challenging coring environment. Percent core recovery at this site (in the 4565 % range) was consequently below the levels achieved at other sites. Drilling at both locations was terminated when the boreholes reached the trachytic basement rocks (at depths of 136 and 197 m for
Sites 1 and 2, respectively).
An exploratory shallow coring campaign was conducted at the Chew Bahir area in 2009 and 2010 along a NW SE transect from the basin margin to the center, which recovered six short sediment cores of 918.8 m length (Foerster et al., 2012, 2015; Trauth et al., 2015). Subsequently, a pilot drilling operation was conducted in the center of the Chew Bahir basin in March 2014 ( 41 m vertical borehole).
Drilling at this site was terminated when ooding made the drilling site inaccessible. This was followed by the drilling of two considerably deeper, twinned vertical boreholes ( 279
and 266 m in at-lying sediments for boreholes 2A and 2B, respectively, Figs. 14, 3b) in a slightly more proximal and elevated position relative to the basin margin in November December 2014. The CHB14-2A and 2B cores consist predominantly of reddish, brown or green silty and sandy clays, with occasional silt and calcareous sand beds. Discrete shell-rich and plant debris-rich horizons occur throughout the cores. Carbonate nodule-rich muds are more common in the
lower part of the core (below 90 m b.s.). Drilling was ter
minated when advancing became impractical and funds were depleted.
6 HSPDP outreach and education activities
The HSPDP has made a priority of developing an effective outreach and educational program that makes the projects goals and ndings accessible to the broader public. Prior to and during drilling activities at each study area, an intensive effort was made to engage with the local public about our activities. This often involved having Kenyan and Ethiopian research and museum outreach specialists make presentations using visual aids such as segments of sediment cores or casts of hominin skulls to explain the science objectives and (importantly) to dispel misunderstandings concerning the nature of our drilling activities (which were commonly assumed to be for resource exploration prior to these presentations) (Fig. 3c). The HSPDP has also worked closely with the National Museums of Kenya and Ethiopia, as well as several museum institutional partners in the US, in the development of post-drilling educational resources that these museums can use in the future to explain the intersection between human evolutionary history and climate history. The most
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 11
MBS Core color Lithology Gamma-25 (g/cm
3)
MS-25 XYZ Gray Scale-25
MBS Core color Lithology MS-25 Grey Scale-25
Gamma-25 (g/cm3)
7d
7c
7e
Figure 9. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-WTK13-1A, from the West Turkana drilling area, northern Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.4 gm cm3 removed); and composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All data collection, instrumentation and parameters as in Fig. 5.
MBS Core color Lithology
Figure 8. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-BTB13-1A, from the Tugen Hills drilling area, central Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.0 gm cm3 removed; n.b.: lower threshold used than for NA cores because of abundant dry and porous diatomites); composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All other data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
visible of these efforts has the been the development of a short (14 min) 3-D lm, produced by the nonprot Earth Images Foundation (http://www.earthimage.org
Web End =www.earthimage.org ), and funded jointly by the US National Science Foundation and ICDP, which documents both the important science questions underpinning the HSPDP as well as the excitement associated with the drilling and core analysis activities (Fig. 3d). This lm will be on long-term display in the human origins halls at the partner museums, and is also available in 2-D format via the project website (http://hspdp.asu.edu
Web End =http://hspdp.asu.edu ) and Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/HSPDP
Web End =www.facebook.com/HSPDP ). The HSPDP has a strong social media presence through its Facebook site and project website, where educational resources, such as numerous photographs of drilling and initial core description activities are made available to the general public. Another exciting and innovative HSPDP outreach activity has been the involvement of an artist in residence, funded through our UK NERC grant. The artist, Julian Ruddock, will be using high-resolution photographs and video footage including interviews he has conducted during drilling activities at the Chew Bahir site, as well as core images to create an art/science collaboration for gallery display in the UK starting in 2016 http://cargocollective.com/artscienceclimatechange/Earth-Core-The-Hominin-Project
Web End =http://cargocollective.com/artscienceclimatechange/ http://cargocollective.com/artscienceclimatechange/Earth-Core-The-Hominin-Project
Web End =Earth-Core-The-Hominin-Project . HSPDP members, led by co-PI Martin Trauth, are currently teaching a series of sum-
MS-25 XYZ
Gamma-25 (g/cm3)
Grey Scale-25
Figure 10. Summary stratigraphy of core ODP-OLO12-1A, from the Koora Plain/Olorgesailie drilling area, southern Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.0 gm cm3 removed); and composite of spectrophoto-metric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). AD: auger drilled sediment samples were bagged and collected in 1 m intervals. All other data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
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12 A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project
MBS
Core color Lithology Gamma-25 (g/cm3) Grey Scale-25
MS-25 XYZ
Core color Lithology MS-25 Grey Scale-25
7f-
7h-
Gamma-25 (gm/cm3)
MBS
Figure 11. Summary stratigraphy of core ODP-OLO12-3A, from the Koora Plain/Olorgesailie drilling area, southern Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.0 gm cm3 removed); composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). AD: augered drilled interval: sediment bagged and collected at Site 1, and not collected at Site 3. All other data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
MS 25 pt smooth
MBS
Figure 13. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-MAG14-2A, from the Lake Magadi drilling area, southern Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.2 gm cm3 removed); composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
MBS
Core color Lithology MS-25 Grey Scale-25
Gamma-25 (gm/cm3)
Core color Lithology Grey Scale-25
Gamma-25 (gm/cm3)
7i-
7j-
7g-
Figure 12. Summary stratigraphy of composite core HSPDPMAG14-1A + 1C (basal portion of 1C core below 125 m only),
from the Lake Magadi drilling area, southern Kenyan Rift Valley, based on initial core description results. Columns from left to right: core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.2 gm cm3 removed); composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
Figure 14. Summary stratigraphy of core HSPDP-CHB14-2A, from the Chew Bahir drilling area, southern Ethiopian Rift Valley, based on Initial Core Description results. Note: coring gaps in CHB14-2A are almost entirely inlled by matching to the twinned borehole CHB14-2B (not illustrated), collected immediately adjacent to this core. Columns from left to right: Core color stratigraphy; lithologic log; see Fig. 5 for the key to lithologies used in all cores illustrated; composite of magnetic susceptibility (MS) log data (25-point running mean smooth) from LacCore Geotek XYZ point sensor data; composite of induced gamma density log data (25-point running mean smooth, spurious values < 1.4 gm cm3 removed); composite of spectrophotometric grey-scale log data (25-point running mean smooth). All data collection, instrumentation, and parameters as in Fig. 5.
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A. Cohen et al.: The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project 13
mer schools in the bio-geosciences that help twenty young scientists from African and European universities to design new research projects on these topics, using the latest methods of data analysis, and to present the results from these projects in an attractive and professional manner. The overall topic of the summer school, held in Ethiopia (SeptemberOctober 2015) and Kenya (FebruaryMarch 2016), is tec-tonics, climate, and human evolution, using the latest results from the HSPDP as the basis of discussions during the event.
7 Future plans
Now that all HSPDP-related drilling is completed, all cores are being analyzed for a wide variety of geochronological, geochemical, sedimentological and paleoecological studies, to assemble a high-resolution record of environmental change at each of the study sites. The geochronology of the cores is being assembled through a combination of high-precision Ar/Ar, paleomagnetics, U-series, tephrostratigraphy, luminescence and (for the most recent parts of the cores) 14C dating. State-of-the-art organic geochemical and clumped isotope proxies of paleotemperature and paleoprecipitation are being applied to the cores. The wide array of fossils (diatoms, ostracodes, molluscs, sh, pollen, phytoliths and charcoal) are also being exploited for the information they provide about both lake and watershed paleoecological conditions. Scanning XRF, XRD, and MSCL log records are also providing extremely high-resolution records of paleoenvironmental and provenance history at each site. Another important component of this analysis is the integration of core data with nearby outcrop information about paleoenvironments of hominins and other fossils and stone tools. Extensive interaction between the data collection and modeling teams of the HSPDP is also underway, to ensure that plausible explanations of climate and landscape dynamics are developed and tested against the core and outcrop data. Ultimately, through interaction between the core analysts and paleoanthropologists involved in the HSPDP, we hope to use our new high-resolution core data and climate/landscape models to both re-evaluate existing models linking hominin evolution with climate and propose new ones consistent with the vast new data set assembled by the HSPDP.
Acknowledgements. Funding for the HSPDP has been provided by ICDP, NSF (grants EAR-1123942, BCS-1241859, and EAR-1338553), NERC (grant NE/K014560/1), DFG priority program SPP 1006, DFG-CRC-806 Our way to Europe, the University of Cologne (Germany), the Hong Kong Research Grants Council (grant no. HKBU201912), the Peter Buck Fund for Human Origins Research (Smithsonian), the William H. Donner Foundation, the Ruth and Vernon Taylor Foundation, Whitney and Betty MacMillan, and the Smithsonians Human Origins Program. We are grateful to the following organizations and individuals for all of their assistance prior to, during and following drilling in making this effort a success: the National Museums of Kenya and Ethiopia,
the ARCCH (Ministry of Culture and Tourism) and Geological Survey of Ethiopia (Ministry of Mines) for facilitating permits to drill on the Afar and Chew Bahir sites, the Kenyan National Council for Science and Technology and Kenyan Ministry of Mines for providing research and export permits for the Kenyan drilling, the National Environmental Management Authority of Kenya for providing environmental permits for drilling in Kenya, DOSECC Exploration Services for drilling supervision, the Operational Support Group of ICDP for providing downhole logging services, the US National Lacustrine Core Facility (LacCore), the National Oil Company of Kenya, Tullow Oil, Tata Magadi, the Magadi, Turkana and Baringo County Councils, the Afar and Southern Nations Regional State Governments for facilitating access to the drill sites, Oldoinyo Nyokie Group Ranch, Soi Lodge, the Nariokotome Mission and people of Nariokotome, Drilling and Prospecting International Ltd., Geosearch (now Orezone) Ltd., Ardan Logistics, Ethioder Ltd., and Boniface Kimeu, Francis Ekai, Mesn Mekonnen, and Brian Grivna. We thank two anonymous reviewers for many helpful suggestions. This is publication number 6 of the Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project.
Edited by: U. HarmsReviewed by: two anonymous referees
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Abstract
The role that climate and environmental history may have played in influencing human evolution has been the focus of considerable interest and controversy among paleoanthropologists for decades. Prior attempts to understand the environmental history side of this equation have centered around the study of outcrop sediments and fossils adjacent to where fossil hominins (ancestors or close relatives of modern humans) are found, or from the study of deep sea drill cores. However, outcrop sediments are often highly weathered and thus are unsuitable for some types of paleoclimatic records, and deep sea core records come from long distances away from the actual fossil and stone tool remains. The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project (HSPDP) was developed to address these issues. The project has focused its efforts on the eastern African Rift Valley, where much of the evidence for early hominins has been recovered. We have collected about 2 km of sediment drill core from six basins in Kenya and Ethiopia, in lake deposits immediately adjacent to important fossil hominin and archaeological sites. Collectively these cores cover in time many of the key transitions and critical intervals in human evolutionary history over the last 4 Ma, such as the earliest stone tools, the origin of our own genus Homo, and the earliest anatomically modern <i>Homo sapiens</i>. Here we document the initial field, physical property, and core description results of the 2012-2014 HSPDP coring campaign.
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