Browsing by Author "Kooyman, Brian Patrick"
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Item Open Access Middle Pleistocene paleoenvironmental reconstruction through phytolith analysis at the Manyara Beds, northern Tanzania(2024-01-11) Bundala, Mariam Joseph; Cote, Susanne Meredith; Walls, Matthew Daniel; Kooyman, Brian Patrick; Dawson, Andria Elizabeth; Strömberg, CarolineThis project is aimed at developing a detailed habitat reconstruction for hominins living at the Manyara Beds of Northern Tanzania during the early Middle Pleistocene using phytolith remains. The dissertation comprises three interlinked, but independent studies. The first study examines the phytolith assemblages from modern surface soils and plants to create a referential baseline for studying phytoliths from the Acacia-Commiphora ecosystem surrounding the Manyara Beds, the same plant regions in which our ancestors reside. Phytoliths from 21 species of plants, including 11 unstudied taxa from this ecosystem, were characterized. Twenty-five composite surface soil samples from five sites were also analyzed. Using Stromberg's 2003 classification and interpretive scheme, this study has demonstrated that the dominant phytoliths for Commiphora are polyhedral epidermal cells, and Acacia is a rare producer of blocky-faceted rectangular plate morphotypes. The second study examines phytolith assemblages from archaeological and non-archaeological sites within the six-meter zone of the uppermost part of the lower Manyara Beds. In general, phytolith assemblage from archaeological and non-archaeological sites confirms the persistence of C4 grasslands. However, varied habitats were available for the Acheulean tool-making hominins at archaeological site MK 4, which featured palms, woody dicots, sedge, and grasslands taxa, including high proportions of warm arid and moist loving C3 and C4 PACMADs and dry adapted C4 chloridoids. There is also a small presence of wet-loving panicoids. The palms, sedges, Commelinaceae, and other aquatic monocots indicate that Manyara Beds were well-watered, at least with the occurrence of freshwater springs or rivers near the Lake shores. Therefore, inferences from phytolith assemblages from the Manyara Beds are consistent with the common predictions of many Plio-Pleistocene sites near the lake shores, pointing to hominin's dependence on water and food resources such as plants and game. The third study presents the analysis of 106 stone tool residue samples from the MK4 site to understand the function of the small flake assemblage found there. Ten tools yielded phytoliths, including two flaked and eight core tools. Phytoliths revealed the exploitation of plant resources, including grasses, palms, sedges, woody dicots, and other unknown taxa.