scholarly journals Plant wax and carbon isotope response to heat and drought in the conifer Juniperus monosperma

2021 ◽  
pp. 104197
Author(s):  
Aaron F. Diefendorf ◽  
Christopher P. Bickford ◽  
Kristen M. Schlanser ◽  
Erika J. Freimuth ◽  
Jeffrey S. Hannon ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (18) ◽  
pp. 5607-5612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter M. J. Douglas ◽  
Mark Pagani ◽  
Marcello A. Canuto ◽  
Mark Brenner ◽  
David A. Hodell ◽  
...  

Paleoclimate records indicate a series of severe droughts was associated with societal collapse of the Classic Maya during the Terminal Classic period (∼800–950 C.E.). Evidence for drought largely derives from the drier, less populated northern Maya Lowlands but does not explain more pronounced and earlier societal disruption in the relatively humid southern Maya Lowlands. Here we apply hydrogen and carbon isotope compositions of plant wax lipids in two lake sediment cores to assess changes in water availability and land use in both the northern and southern Maya lowlands. We show that relatively more intense drying occurred in the southern lowlands than in the northern lowlands during the Terminal Classic period, consistent with earlier and more persistent societal decline in the south. Our results also indicate a period of substantial drying in the southern Maya Lowlands from ∼200 C.E. to 500 C.E., during the Terminal Preclassic and Early Classic periods. Plant wax carbon isotope records indicate a decline in C4 plants in both lake catchments during the Early Classic period, interpreted to reflect a shift from extensive agriculture to intensive, water-conservative maize cultivation that was motivated by a drying climate. Our results imply that agricultural adaptations developed in response to earlier droughts were initially successful, but failed under the more severe droughts of the Terminal Classic period.


2016 ◽  
Vol 371 (1698) ◽  
pp. 20150235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin T. Uno ◽  
Pratigya J. Polissar ◽  
Emma Kahle ◽  
Craig Feibel ◽  
Sonia Harmand ◽  
...  

Reconstructing vegetation at hominin fossil sites provides us critical information about hominin palaeoenvironments and the potential role of climate in their evolution. Here we reconstruct vegetation from carbon isotopes of plant wax biomarkers in sediments of the Nachukui Formation in the Turkana Basin. Plant wax biomarkers were extracted from samples from a wide range of lithologies that include fluvial–lacustrine sediments and palaeosols, and therefore provide a record of vegetation from diverse depositional environments. Carbon isotope ratios from biomarkers indicate a highly dynamic vegetation structure ( ca 5–100% C 4 vegetation) from 2.3 to 1.7 Ma, with an overall shift towards more C 4 vegetation on the landscape after about 2.1 Ma. The biomarker isotope data indicate ca 25–30% more C 4 vegetation on the landscape than carbon isotope data of pedogenic carbonates from the same sequence. Our data show that the environments of early Paranthropus and Homo in this part of the Turkana Basin were primarily mixed C 3 –C 4 to C 4 -dominated ecosystems. The proportion of C 4 -based foods in the diet of Paranthropus increases through time, broadly paralleling the increase in C 4 vegetation on the landscape, whereas the diet of Homo remains unchanged. Biomarker isotope data associated with the Kokiselei archaeological site complex, which includes the site where the oldest Acheulean stone tools to date were recovered, indicate 61–97% C 4 vegetation on the landscape. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Major transitions in human evolution’.


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