FOSSIL HOT-SPRING TRAVERTINE IN THE TURKANA BASIN, NORTHERN KENYA: STRUCTURE, FACIES, AND GENESIS

2002 ◽  
pp. 123-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROBIN W. RENAUT ◽  
CHRIS K. MORLEY ◽  
BRIAN JONES
2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (5) ◽  
pp. 996-1002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henning Scholz ◽  
Matthias Glaubrecht

New field collections allow the study and description ofValvata juliaenew species from the Pliocene upper Burgi Member of the Koobi Fora Formation of Kenya. The shell morphology of this species varies from trochospiral to planispiral to open coiled. The species is restricted to a short stratigraphic interval.Valvata juliaeis considered as an invader of the Turkana Basin during a lacustrine transgression event. The open coiling of the species is interpreted as an ecophenotypic response to a high level of environmental stress caused by lake level fluctuations and emergence of delta systems. These environmental conditions broughtValvata juliaeto extinction soon after it invaded the Turkana Basin.


2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-90
Author(s):  
Henning Scholz ◽  
Matthias Glaubrecht

Shells and opercula of bithyniid gastropods assigned toGabbiellaare found in high abundance in the Pleistocene upper Burgi and KBS Members of the Koobi Fora Formation, Turkana Basin, northern Kenya. The systematic paleontology of the Turkana BasinGabbiellais revised herein based on morphological comparison with the opercula of other Recent African bithyniids. The fossils from the upper Burgi and KBS Members are here assigned toGabbiella roseaMandahl-Barth, 1968, a species not known from the Turkana fossil record before, but extant in this lake today. A sampling and taphonomic bias is identified which influences the relative abundance ofGabbiellashells and opercula, as a mesh size of 0.63 mm or less is necessary to capture all opercula preserved in the sediments. Accordingly, opercula were found to be significantly more abundant than shells, indicating a different preservation potential of shells and opercula, as the calcitic operculum is more robust than the aragonitic shell. In contrast to previous arguments that most shellbeds in the Turkana Basin sequence represent undisturbed life assemblages, a taphonomic bias is clearly evident reducing the fidelity of the Turkana Basin mollusk assemblages.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chad L. Yost ◽  
Rachel L. Lupien ◽  
Catherine Beck ◽  
Craig S. Feibel ◽  
Steven R. Archer ◽  
...  

The Turkana Basin in northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia has yielded hundreds of hominin fossils and is among the most important localities in the world for studying human origins. High resolution climate and vegetation reconstructions from this region can elucidate potential linkages between hominin evolution and environmental change. Microcharcoal and phytoliths were examined from a 216 m (1.87–1.38 Ma) drill core (WTK13), which targeted paleo-Lake Lorenyang sediments from the Nachukui Formation of the Turkana Basin. A total of 287 samples were analyzed at ∼32–96 cm intervals, providing millennial-scale temporal resolution. To better understand how basin sediments record fire and vegetation from the watershed, the paleorecord was compared with nine modern sediment samples collected from Lake Turkana along a transect of increasing distance from the 1978 to 1979 shoreline. This included vegetation surveys and phytolith production data for species from areas proximal to the basin. We found that phytolith and microcharcoal concentrations decreased predictably moving off shore. However, phytoliths from plants sourced in the Ethiopian Highlands increased moving off shore, likely the result of increased exposure to the Omo River sediment plume. In our down-core study, microcharcoal was well-preserved but phytolith preservation was poor below ∼60 m (∼1.50 Ma). Spectral analysis revealed that microcharcoal often varied at precessional (∼21 kyr) periodicities, and through a correlation with δDwax, linked orbitally forced peaks in precipitation with elevated fire on the landscape. Phytoliths revealed that alternating mesic C4 versus xeric C4 grass dominance likely varied at precessional periodicities as well, but that grass community composition was also mediated by basin geometry. Two high eccentricity intervals of particularly high amplitude and abrupt environmental change were centered at ∼1.72 and 1.50 Ma, with the intervening period experiencing high fire variability. With the switch from lacustrine to fluvial-deltaic deposition at the core site by 1.5 Ma, mesic C4 grasses dominated and fire activity was high. This upper interval correlated to the time interval from which Nariokotome Boy (Homo erectus/ergaster) was discovered 3 km east of our drill site. Phytoliths indicated a seasonally wet and open landscape dominated by xeric C4 grasses, sedges, and other herbaceous plants.


Palaios ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 389 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Ekdale ◽  
F. H. Brown ◽  
C. S. Feibel

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