SASQUA conference

June 6, 2024
WDG

South African research trip (part 1 of 3)

By Jelle Kraak

As part of my MSc Biological Sciences (University of Amsterdam) research project entitled “Assessing the effect of human induced fire regime changes on vegetation in the Drakensberg mountains” (for further details click to see previous post). I’ve travelled to Africa, where I’ll be staying a month. During this mini blogpost series I’ll take you with me on my travels! 

In the first week of my visit here, I along with my supervisor Prof. Trevor Hill and students from the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal went to visit the biennial SASQUA (Southern African Society for Quaternary Research) congress.

During the first poster session, I presented my poster which went into detail on how we are developing a proxy to reconstruct past fire using micro-Fourier Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy (µFTIR). These reconstructed fire temperatures can then be compared with phytolith or pollen data to assess the effects of different fire temperatures on local vegetation over time. The presentation and poster were well received!

After my poster presentation there were two more congress days which were filled with interesting talks and beautiful posters.

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Mapping Ancient Africa: Writing workshop

June 5, 2024
WDG

The Mapping Ancient Africa (MAA) writing workshop is currently in full swing in Kenya. Running from 3 June until the 6 June 2024 a diverse range of skills related to academic publishing is being delivered by our international team, including: structuring a scientific article, managing references and revision strategies. There is also plenty of time set aside for writing and getting feedback from more experienced academic writers. The manuscripts being developed at the workshop are being designed to be submitted to the MAA special issue of Quaternary International.

Scientific writing in action:

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Introducing: Jelle Kraak

June 5, 2024
WDG

Hello Ecology of the Past readers, my name is Jelle Kraak and I’m currently doing a research project for my MSc Biological Sciences (University of Amsterdam) supervised by William Gosling (University of Amsterdam), Jemma Finch (University of KwaZulu-Natal), and Trevor Hill (University of KwaZulu-Natal). The project is entitled: “Assessing the effect of human induced fire regime changes on vegetation in the Drakensberg mountains”. During the project I will visit South Africa to work at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and visit field site thanks to partial funding from the Amsterdam University Funds.

Research  project outline                                                                                 

As many of you know, humans have been interacting with the environment for millennia in various ways. One of the ways in which humans interact with the environment is through the ignition of fires. By doing so, humans may change fire regimes (fire frequency, severity and/or intensity), which in turn can cause changes in vegetation composition and structure. By using a combination of phytolith (local vegetation) and charcoal (fire) data from two sediment cores obtained from wetland environments in the Drakensberg mountains, we aim to assess the effect of fire regime changes on vegetation over the last 6000 years.

The phytoliths (biogenic silica microfossils) allow for the reconstruction of the past vegetation. Charcoal fragments characterize all aspects of past fire regimes: (i) frequency (time series analysis of charcoal data), (ii) severity (abundance of charcoal in samples reflecting biomass consumed), and (iii) intensity (spectral properties of individual charcoal fragments reflecting combustion temperature). 

The most interesting part of this project (in my humble opinion) is that this study is the first to use micro-Fourier Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy (µFTIR) to reconstruct fire temperatures from field samples ánd combine these accurately reconstructed temperatures with local vegetation data! It is important to accurately estimate fire temperatures, as the temperature of a fire dictates the type of plant materials which are consumed in a fire (the higher the temperature, the greater the proportion of woody material burning up). Similar studies have been conducted previously, however, these studies compared fire severity i.e. total burnt biomass with vegetation data. Although this works decently, total burnt biomass is not an accurate representation of fire intensity or temperature, as at very high temperatures biomass turns to ash, which cannot be detected in sediment cores. Through parameterizing both the vegetation changes and the fire regime we will provide a comprehensive picture of how changing human fire use practices modified the vegetation. We anticipate that: (i) a decrease in fire intensity resulted in woody encroachment of the surrounding vegetation, which was concomitant with the arrival of agropastoralists c. 600 years ago, and (ii) a shift in the proportion of C3 and C4 grass species in reaction to temperature changes in the Drakensberg mountains.

Mapping Ancient Africa: Seminar 18

June 4, 2024
WDG

On the 20 June 2024 (17:00-18:00 CEST) the next Mapping Ancient Africa (MAA) online seminar will take place. This talk will introduce a parallel INQUA funded project “PalaeoHome” (@PalaeoHome). It is hoped that there can be complimentary lines of research identified between PalaeoHome and the MAA projects.

  • Speaker:  Kumar Akhilesh1*
  • Co-authors: Prachi Joshi1, Yanni Gunnell2, Anupama K3, Doris Barboni3, Vandana Prasad4, Mohammad Sahnouni5, Sileshi Semaw5, Razika Chelli6

  • Title: PalaeoHome Palaeolithic Hominins and Habitats: Out of Africa to South Asia
  • Abstract: Evidence of enduring preference among hominins for particular geographic places or habitats over long periods is a global phenomenon in the Palaeolithic. Sites such as Attirampakkam (India), have evidence of Early Pleistocene Acheulian occupation contemporary with some sites in East Africa and elsewhere. Ongoing work at Sendrayanpalyam in the vicinity of ATM, suggest more variability than expected in Lower Palaeolithic assemblages in India. Comparative studies between Lower Palaeolithic assemblages and their ecological settings in key areas of both Africa and India as well as along regions of population migration, carry implications for investigating debates on the routes and timing of migrations and evolution of Oldowan and Acheulian technocomplexes. Here, we discuss aspects of research that seeks to bring together experts working in India, Africa, Arabia, and SW and E Asia to address major issues related to multiple questions on the ‘Out of Africa’ story as related to chronology, palaeoenvironments and behavioural variability over the Lower Palaeolithic (Early to Middle Pleistocene), exploring similarities as also differences in evolutionary trajectories. We plan to establish inclusive global networks of scientists with similar interests, embracing diversity and differences in views, to organise hybrid meetings (online, in-person in India and Ethiopia) uniting established scientists and with a prominent ECR component. A key part includes skill development amongst ECRs who will also join us in engaging in public outreach and science communication to generate an awareness of prehistory among children, teachers and the wider public. Above all, this project seeks to build global networks of scientists from diverse disciplines to share ideas that can culminate in publications that explore diverse opinions on topics of key interest in the Lower Palaeolithic of India and Africa.

The seminar will be delivered via Zoom. The link for the seminar can be obtained from the MAA Slack channel or by contacting the chair of this seminar (Stefanie Kaboth-Bahr). If you want to know more about the Mapping Ancient Africa project visit our web pages and please do not hesitate to get in contact if you want to get involved.

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Phytoliths, starch grains and diatoms

May 29, 2024
WDG

Caroline Goossens receives the Florschütz Award.

On Friday 24 May 2024 the Palynologische Kring (Dutch palynological society) held a seminar series and laboratory workshop at the Institute for Biodiversity & Ecosystem Dynamics (University of Amsterdam). During the afternoon we had the annual meeting of the society, the presentation of our MSc Thesis prize, four seminars and two laboratory demonstrations. The MSc thesis prize “Florschütz Award” was won by Caroline Goossens (VU Amsterdam) for her thesis entitle: “An Eemian-Early Weichselian sequence in the Amersfoort Basin, the Netherlands”; the project was supervised by Natalie Van der Putten, Cees Kasse and Jeroen Schokker. We hope that Caroline will present her thesis at a future Palynologishe Kring meeting.

Teye Aukes presenting on the diatoms of ancient Rome

The talk series was kicked off by Nina Witteveen (University of Amsterdam) who presented part of her PhD thesis (currently awaiting defense), entitled: “Long-term forest recovery in Amazonia insights from phytolith analysis”. Nina discussed the impact of past peoples on the vegetation of Suriname based on her work identifying phytoliths in soil samples collected at varying distances from an archaeological site. The second talk was given my Amanda Henry (Leiden University) who demonstrated how the analysis of starch grains extracted from archaeological context can provide insights in to past diets. She used these evidences to suggest that early humans and Neanderthals had a similar diversity of plants in their diets. The third talk was given by University of Amsterdam MSc researcher Teye Aukes and focused upon his identification of diatoms from an swampy lagoon environment near Ostia (Italy). He drew conclusions from these data about the antiquity of salt production in ancient Rome. The final talk was given online by Welmoed Out (Moesgaard Museum) who presented a detailed analysis of inter- and intra-analyst variability in phytolith morphometric analysis.

After the seminars we moved upstairs to the microscope laboratory where Nina Witteveen and Ana Smuk (University of Groningen) showed off phytoliths from their study site in South America and the Netherlands.

Some of the Palynologische Kring members enjoying some refreshment after the event.

Greater difference between airborne and flower pollen chemistry, than between pollen collected across a pollution gradient in the Netherlands

May 23, 2024
WDG

de Weger, L.A., Verbeek, C., Markey, E., O’Connor, D.J. & Gosling, W.D. (2024) Greater difference between airborne and flower pollen chemistry, than between pollen collected across a pollution gradient in the Netherlands. Science of The Total Environment 172963. DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172963

Associated data: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.25834894

Read more about the story behind this NWO funded research project:

Indigenous and colonial influences on Amazonian forests

May 20, 2024
WDG

Open access:

Nascimento, M.N., Aukes, T.F. & McMichael, C.N. (2024) Indigenous and colonial influences on Amazonian forests. Plants, People, Planet. DOI: 10.1002/ppp3.10515

XXIV Biennial Congress of the Southern African Society for Quaternary Research (SASQUA)

May 17, 2024
WDG

The SASQUA congress will kick off next week (19-24 May 2024) in Cango Valley (South Africa). Sessions cover many aspects of Quaternary science and range from archaeology through palaeoclimate to geological topics. The full program is now available to download.

  • Quick, L.J & Asithandile, N. (2024) Proceedings of the XXIV Biennial Congress of the Southern African Society for Quaternary Research (SASQUA), Cango Valley, South Africa, 19-24 May 2024. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.11125697

To find out more about the meeting and other SASQUA activities you can also visit the organizations web pages: https://sasqua.co.za/

Mapping Ancient Africa: Video of seminar 17

May 17, 2024
WDG

The 17th online Mapping Ancient Africa seminar took place on Thursday 16 May 2024. The seminar was delivered by N’dji dit Jacques Dembele and was entitled “Evidence of recent seismicity in the West African Craton: The Bamako seisemites Mali”. In the seminar surprising new evidence for Quaternary seismic activity within the West African Craton – which was thought to be tectonically stable – was presented. Specifically, the identification of clastic dykes and deformation within sedimentary and lacustrine deposits was used to suggest past high magnitude earth quakes in the last 170,000 years.

Details of this seminar can be found here. You can find more Mapping Ancient Africa seminar videos on the “Ecology of the Past” YouTube channel.

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INQUA Fellowship Journey: Alfred Houngnon

May 16, 2024
WDG

Alfred Houngnon

Alfred Houngnon was awarded an INQUA Fellowship in 2024 to develop his work on past environmental change in the Dahomey Gap (western Africa). Through the project Alfred is making a series of videos about his fellowship journey. In the first video Alfred introduced his project and collaborators (click here to watch the first part). In the two latest instalments (below) Alfred explains: (i) one of his key methodological approaches (modern pollen trapping), and (ii) the modern vegetation of the region and current threats to the vegetation.

To watch more videos about past environmental change visit the Ecology of the Past YouTube channel.

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