Download
Cite as:
Lamb, H.; Bittner, L.; Davies, S.; Gelaw, M.F.; Gil-Romera, G.; Grady, D.; Lemma, B.; Miehe, G. &amp; Zech, M. (14.07.2018). <b>Garba Guracha revisited: testing the Mountain Exile Hypothesis</b>. Presented at AFQUA, Nairobi,Kenya.

Resource Description

Title: Garba Guracha revisited: testing the Mountain Exile Hypothesis
FOR816dw ID: 118
Publication Date: 2018-07-14
License and Usage Rights:
Resource Owner(s):
Individual: Henry Lamb
Contact:
Individual: Lucas Bittner
Contact:
Individual: Sarah Davies
Contact:
Individual: Mekbib Fekadu Gelaw
Contact:
Individual: Graciela Gil-Romera
Contact:
Individual: David Grady
Contact:
Individual: Bruk Lemma
Contact:
Individual: Georg Miehe
Contact:
Individual: Michael Zech
Contact:
Abstract:
Garba Guracha is a cirque lake located at 3950 m altitude in the Bale Mountains National Park, Ethiopia, at the boundary between the Afro-alpine and sub-alpine Ericaceous vegetation belts. Jean-Jacques Tiercelin and Mohammed Umer cored its sediments in about 2002, leading to publication of one of the longest, best-dated, and most continuous Late Pleistocene-Holocene palaeoenvironmental records from above 3000 m in Africa. Their 2007 and 2008 papers document the vegetation and deglaciation history of the Bale Mountain plateau, which supports the most extensive area of Afro-alpine vegetation on the planet, and an exceptionally rich endemic biodiversity. However, those publications revealed little about human exploitation of the Bale Mountain environment.<br/> <br/> We again cored Garba Guracha (‘Black Lake’ in the Oromo language) in February 2017, as part of a major DFG-funded research unit (“The Mountain Exile Hypothesis - How humans benefited from and re-shaped African high altitude ecosystems during Quaternary climate changes”) that aims to test the hypothesis that human settlement of the Bale Mountains dates from at least the late Pleistocene. We also drilled cores from seven other sites in the area in early 2018, in partnership with archaeological, glacial geological and pedological investigations. Here we attempt an early synthesis of the results of ?XRF geochemistry, stable isotope, biomarker, pollen and charcoal analyses of the Garba Guracha sediments with a new age model based on radiocarbon and 210Pb ages, and suggest an initial interpretation of anthropogenic impact on the Bale Mountains.<br/>
Additional Infos:
Presented by Mekbib Fekadu Gelaw
Keywords:
| charcoal | p4 | p5 | pollen | lake sediment |
Literature type specific fields:
PRESENTATION
Conference Name: AFQUA
Date: 14.07.2018
Location: Nairobi,Kenya
Metadata Provider:
Individual: Luise Wraase
Contact:
Online Distribution:
Download File: http://vhrz669.hrz.uni-marburg.de/bale/publications.do?citid=118


Quick search

  • Publications:
  • Datasets: