Science 2012-03-09

Intensifying weathering and land use in Iron Age Central Africa.

Germain Bayon, Bernard Dennielou, Joël Etoubleau, Emmanuel Ponzevera, Samuel Toucanne, Sylvain Bermell

Index: Science 335(6073) , 1219-22, (2012)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

About 3000 years ago, a major vegetation change occurred in Central Africa, when rainforest trees were abruptly replaced by savannas. Up to this point, the consensus of the scientific community has been that the forest disturbance was caused by climate change. We show here that chemical weathering in Central Africa, reconstructed from geochemical analyses of a marine sediment core, intensified abruptly at the same period, departing substantially from the long-term weathering fluctuations related to the Late Quaternary climate. Evidence that this weathering event was also contemporaneous with the migration of Bantu-speaking farmers across Central Africa suggests that human land-use intensification at that time had already made a major impact on the rainforest.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

182Hf-182W age dating of a 26Al-poor inclusion and implications for the origin of short-lived radioisotopes in the early Solar System.

2013-05-28

[Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 110(22) , 8819-23, (2013)]

Dispersion engineering of thick high-Q silicon nitride ring-resonators via atomic layer deposition.

2012-12-03

[Opt. Express 20(25) , 27661-9, (2012)]

Concentration dependence in kinetic arrest of the first-order magnetic transition in Ta doped HfFe2.

2013-02-13

[J. Phys. Condens. Matter 25(6) , 066011, (2013)]

Infrared spectroscopic and theoretical studies of the OTiF2, OZrF2 and OHfF2 molecules with terminal oxo ligands.

2012-10-14

[Dalton Trans. 41(38) , 11706-15, (2012)]

Ni ion release, osteoblast-material interactions, and hemocompatibility of hafnium-implanted NiTi alloy.

2012-04-01

[J. Biomed. Mater. Res. B. Appl. Biomater. 100(3) , 646-59, (2012)]

More Articles...