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Showing 1–4 of 4 results
Advanced filters: Author: Sander van der Kaars Clear advanced filters
  • Megafaunal extinction in Australia has been attributed to both climate change and human causation. Here, van der Kaarset al. present a 150,000 year record offshore southwest Australia in which they refine the timing and nature of regional ecosystem changes and megafaunal population collapse.

    • Sander van der Kaars
    • Gifford H. Miller
    • Scott J. Lehman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-7
  • The hydrological response to climate forcing during the past 25,000 years varied throughout the Indo-Pacific warm pool region. Marine sediment records suggest that during the Last Glacial Maximum, drying in northeast Borneo did not result in a vegetation shift, whereas the development of a severe dry season on Sumba led to water stress and the expansion of herby vegetation.

    • Nathalie Dubois
    • Delia W. Oppo
    • Braddock K. Linsley
    Research
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 7, P: 513-517
  • Stratigraphic, chronological, environmental and faunal context are provided to the newly discovered fossils of hominins that lived in the So’a Basin in Flores, Indonesia, 700,000 years ago; the stone tools recovered with the fossils are similar to those associated with the much younger Homo floresiensis from Flores, discovered in Liang Bua to the west.

    • Adam Brumm
    • Gerrit D. van den Bergh
    • Michael J. Morwood
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 534, P: 249-253