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In Africa, SU professor discovers climate change affected evolution

By Sandra Plasse
Posted: 9/13/07, 1:01 AM EST Section: News
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Christopher Scholz, associate professor of earth sciences at Syracuse University, was the lead investigator on the Lake Malawi Drilling Project, which recently discovered that major African climate changes may have significantly affected human evolution.

The paper, published online last week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that amid severe droughts, a rainy period 70,000 years ago may have allowed for the "Out of Africa" movement.

Lake Malawi and Lake Tanganyika diagrams cover the walls of Scholz's office. His curiosity about going to the source of evolution, where the continents broke apart and where ocean basins formed, led him to eastern Africa as a graduate student 20 years ago.

He has done research in the past on Africa's Lake Victoria and Lake Tanganyika, as well as the world's deepest lake, Lake Baikal, located in Siberia.

What humans know about Earth's history of climate change during tens of thousands of years comes from the study of deep oceans or ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland, Scholz said. These studies have allowed humans to understand a lot, he added, but "people did not live in the deep ocean or ice sheets."

Humans evolved in the interior of Africa, he said.

The Lake Malawi project, funded by The National Science Foundation, was conducted at the southern end of the African rift valley.

More than 70,000 years ago, there were fluctuations in the human population due to changes in climate, according to the study. At one point, there were only 10,000 individuals in existence.

About 70,000 years ago, a wetter climate may have prompted an increase in population and "subsequent spreading of 'Out of Africa' colonizers," Scholz said.

The migration of the human population and climate changes significantly affected evolution, he said.

The sediment and mud samples collected from Lake Malawi, which is 450 miles long and more than 2,300 feet deep, are records of climate changes where human ancestors evolved, according to the study.
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love

posted 10/09/08 @ 11:52 AM EST

awesome!!

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