Knowledge Resource Center for Ecological Environment in Arid Area
DOI | 10.1006/jhev.2000.0453 |
Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of middle Miocene paleosols bearing Kenyapithecus and Victoriapithecus, Nyakach Formation, southwestern Kenya | |
Wynn, JG; Retallack, GJ | |
通讯作者 | Wynn, JG |
来源期刊 | JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
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ISSN | 0047-2484 |
出版年 | 2001 |
卷号 | 40期号:4页码:263-288 |
英文摘要 | Paleosols in the middle Miocene (15 Ma) Nyakach Formation at Kaimogool, near Sondu, southwestern Kenya have yielded specimens of the early cercopithecoid Victoriapithecus macinnesi and the early kenyapithecine Kenyapithecus africanus, and can be used as evidence for the environmental mosaic occupied by these primates. Five distinct types of paleosols (pedotypes) are recognized in the Nyakach Formation section at Kaimogool South. The most common paleosols are reddish brown, silty calcareous profiles with blocky structure and large root traces (Ratong pedotype) which are interpreted as soils of well-drained, dry bushland or thicket (nyika). Weakly developed paleosols associated with paleochannels (Dhero pedotype) represent wooded grassland early in the ecological succession from streamside flooding. One of these paleosols has yielded a fossil flora of grasses and small-leaved dicots like those of modern semi-arid wooded grassland. Crumb structured, calcareous paleosols with iron-manganese nodules (Yom pedotype) are interpreted to represent seasonally waterlogged, wooded grassland (dambo or vlei). Thick, red clayey, calcareous paleosols with blocky ped structure and large root traces (Tut pedotype) are interpreted as soils of well-drained dry woodland. Other blocky-structured, gray to brown calcareous paleosols with iron-manganese nodules (Chido pedotype) are interpreted as soils of seasonally waterlogged, riparian dry woodland. Fossil soils, plants and gastropods are evidence of an unusually dry (300-500 mm mean annual precipitation) habitat for apes, consisting of a vegetational mosaic dominated by dry woodland, bushland and thickets with few areas of seasonally waterlogged grassland. Fossils of V, maccinnesi are rare from Nyakach, but were found in paleosols representative of bushland and thicket habitats (Ratong). Fossils of the ape K. africanus were found within paleosols indicative of dry woodland (Tut). Other paleosol types representative of seasonally dry dambo grassland (Yom), colonizing grassland (Dhero) or riparian woodland (Chido) are also represented, but have not yet produced primate fossils. (C) 2001 Academic Press. |
英文关键词 | paleosol paleoenvironment middle Miocene Kenyapithecus Victoriapithecus |
类型 | Review |
语种 | 英语 |
国家 | USA |
收录类别 | SCI-E ; SSCI |
WOS记录号 | WOS:000167926700001 |
WOS关键词 | PEDOGENIC CARBONATE HORIZON ; MABOKO ISLAND ; FORT-TERNAN ; WESTERN KENYA ; PALEOPRECIPITATION INDICATOR ; KISINGIRI VOLCANO ; PRIMATE FOSSILS ; RUSINGA ISLAND ; NORTHERN KENYA ; EAST-AFRICA |
WOS类目 | Anthropology ; Evolutionary Biology |
WOS研究方向 | Anthropology ; Evolutionary Biology |
资源类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/141285 |
作者单位 | (1)Univ Oregon, Dept Geol Sci, Eugene, OR 97403 USA |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Wynn, JG,Retallack, GJ. Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of middle Miocene paleosols bearing Kenyapithecus and Victoriapithecus, Nyakach Formation, southwestern Kenya[J],2001,40(4):263-288. |
APA | Wynn, JG,&Retallack, GJ.(2001).Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of middle Miocene paleosols bearing Kenyapithecus and Victoriapithecus, Nyakach Formation, southwestern Kenya.JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION,40(4),263-288. |
MLA | Wynn, JG,et al."Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of middle Miocene paleosols bearing Kenyapithecus and Victoriapithecus, Nyakach Formation, southwestern Kenya".JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION 40.4(2001):263-288. |
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