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Title: Ancient Sahara Graveyard Hints at Once-Green Desert
Source: AP via Fox
URL Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,403921,00.html
Published: Aug 15, 2008
Author: not attributed
Post Date: 2008-08-29 20:24:20 by farmfriend
Ping List: *Agriculture-Environment*     Subscribe to *Agriculture-Environment*
Keywords: None
Views: 64
Comments: 1

Ancient Sahara Graveyard Hints at Once-Green Desert

Friday, August 15, 2008

WASHINGTON — A tiny woman and two children were laid to rest on a bed of flowers 5,000 years ago in what is now the barren Sahara Desert.

The slender arms of the youngsters were still extended to the woman in perpetual embrace when researchers discovered their skeletons in a remarkable cemetery that is providing clues to two civilizations who lived there, a thousand years apart, when the region was moist and green.

Paul Sereno of the University of Chicago and colleagues were searching for the remains of dinosaurs in the African country of Niger when they came across the startling find, detailed at a news conference Thursday at the National Geographic Society.

"Part of discovery is finding things that you least expect," he said. "When you come across something like that in the middle of the desert it sends a tingle down your spine."

Some 200 graves of humans were found during fieldwork at the site in 2005 and 2006, as well as remains of animals, large fish and crocodiles.

"Everywhere you turned, there were bones belonging to animals that don't live in the desert," said Sereno. "I realized we were in the green Sahara."

The graveyard, uncovered by hot desert winds, is near what would have been a lake at the time people lived there.

It's in a region called Gobero, hidden away in Niger's forbidding Tenere Desert, known to Tuareg nomads as a "desert within a desert."

The human remains dated from two distinct populations that lived there during wet times, with a dry period in between.

The researchers used radiocarbon dating to determine when these ancient people lived there. Even the most recent were some 1,000 years before the building of the pyramids in Egypt.

The first group, known as the Kiffian, hunted wild animals and speared huge perch with harpoons. They colonized the region when the Sahara was at its wettest, between 10,000 and 8,000 years ago.

The researchers said the Kiffians were tall, sometimes reaching well over 6 feet.

The second group lived in the region between 7,000 and 4,500 years ago. The Tenerians were smaller and had a mixed economy of hunting, fishing and cattle herding.

Their burials often included jewelry or ritual poses. For example, one girl had an upper-arm bracelet carved from a hippo tusk.

An adult Tenerian male was buried with his skull resting on part of a clay vessel; another adult male was interred seated on the shell of a mud turtle.

Pollen remains show the woman and two children were buried on a bed of flowers. The researchers preserved the group just as they had been for thousands of years.

"At first glance, it's hard to imagine two more biologically distinct groups of people burying their dead in the same place," said team member Chris Stojanowski, a bioarchaeologist from Arizona State University.

Stojanowski said ridges on the thigh bone of one Kiffian man show he had huge leg muscles, "which suggests he was eating a lot of protein and had an active, strenuous lifestyle. The Kiffian appear to have been fairly healthy — it would be difficult to grow a body that tall and muscular without sufficient nutrition."

On the other hand, ridges on a Tenerian male were barely visible.

"This man's life was less rigorous, perhaps taking smaller fish and game with more advanced hunting technologies," Stojanowski said.

Helene Jousse, a zooarchaeologist from the Museum of Natural History in Vienna, Austria, reported that animal bones found in the area were from types common today in the Serengeti in Kenya, such as elephants, giraffes, hartebeests and warthogs.

The finds are detailed in reports in Thursday's edition of the journal PLoS One and in the September issue of National Geographic Magazine.

While the Sahara is desert today, a small difference in Earth's orbit once brought seasonal monsoons farther north, wetting the landscape with lakes with lush margins and drawing animals and people.

The research was funded by National Geographic, the Island Fund of the New York Community Trust, the National Science Foundation and the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. Subscribe to *Agriculture-Environment*

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Lush Sahara took years to dry

Alister Doyle
Reuters

The once-green Sahara turned to desert over thousands of years rather than in an abrupt shift as once thought, according to a study that may help understanding of future climate changes.

And there are now signs of a tiny shift back towards greener conditions in parts of the Sahara, apparently because of global warming, says the lead author of the report published today in the journal Science.

The study of ancient pollen, spores and aquatic organisms in sediments in Lake Yoa in northern Chad shows the region gradually shifted from savannah 6000 years ago towards the arid conditions that took over about 2700 years ago.

The findings, about one of the biggest environmental shifts of the past 10,000 years, challenge notions based on evidence in marine sediments that a far quicker change created the world's biggest hot desert.

"The hypothesis [of a sudden shift] was astonishing but it was still taken up," says German researcher Dr Stefan Kröpelin of the University of Cologne, lead author of the study with scientists in Belgium, Canada, the US, Sweden and France.

The scientists, studying the remote 3.5 square kilometre Lake Yoa, found the region once had grasses and scattered acacia trees, ferns and herbs.

The salty lake is renewed by groundwater welling up from beneath the desert.

Gradual drying, blamed on shifts in monsoon rains linked to shifts in the power of the sun, meant large amounts of dust started blowing in the region about 4300 years ago.

Kröpelin says that improved understanding of the formation of the Sahara might help climate modellers improve forecasts of what is in store from global warming.

The Sahara got greener when temperatures rose around the end of the ice age about 12,000 years ago. Warmer air can absorb more moisture from the oceans and it fell as rain far inland.

Turning green again

"Today I think we have the same thing going on, a global warming," he says, adding that there are already greener signs in a huge area with almost no reliable weather records.

"I see a clear trend to a new greening of the Sahara, a very slow one," he says, based on visits to some of the remotest and uninhabited parts of the desert over the past two decades.

"You go to unoccupied areas over a long time and you know there was pure sand there without a single snake or scorpion. Now you see tens of kilometres covered by grass."

http://www. ab c.net.au/science/articles/2008/05/09/2240138.htm


"You have delusions of adequacy."

farmfriend  posted on  2008-08-29   20:26:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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