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Stable isotopic composition of fossil mammal teeth and environmental change in southwestern South Africa during the Pliocene and Pleistocene

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology(2016)

Cited 21|Views15
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Abstract
The past 5millionyears mark a global change from the warmer, more stable climate of the Pliocene to the initiation of glacial–interglacial cycles during the Pleistocene. Marine core sediment records located off the coast of southwestern Africa indicate aridification and intensified upwelling in the Benguela Current over the Pliocene and Pleistocene. However, few terrestrial records document environmental change in southwestern Africa over this time interval. Here we synthesize new and published carbon and oxygen isotope data of the teeth from large mammals (>6kg) at Langebaanweg (~5millionyears ago, Ma), Elandsfontein (1.0–0.6Ma), and Hoedjiespunt (0.35–0.20Ma), to evaluate environmental change in southwestern Africa between the Pliocene and Pleistocene. The majority of browsing and grazing herbivores from these sites yield enamel δ13C values within the range expected for animals with a pure C3 diet, however some taxa have enamel δ13C values that suggest the presence of small amounts C4 grasses at times during the Pleistocene. Considering that significant amounts of C4 grasses require a warm growing season, these results indicate that the winter rainfall zone, characteristic of the region today, could have been in place for the past 5millionyears. The average δ18O value of the herbivore teeth increases ~4.4‰ between Langebaanweg and Elandsfontein for all taxa except suids. This increase may solely be a function of a change in hydrology between the fluvial system at Langebaanweg and the spring-fed environments at Elandsfontein, or a combination of factors that include depositional context, regional circulation and global climate. However, an increase in regional aridity or global cooling between the early Pliocene and mid-Pleistocene cannot explain the entire increase in enamel δ18O values. Spring-fed environments like those at Elandsfontein may have provided critical resources for mammalian fauna in the mid-Pleistocene within an increasingly arid southwestern Africa ecosystem.
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Key words
Pliocene-Pleistocene climate,Stable isotopes,Tooth enamel,South Africa,C4 vegetation
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