Non-FAU Project
Start date : 01.09.2016
End date : 30.11.2019
	The environmental hypotheses of human evolution postulate that climate-derived environmental
	changes and tectonic forcing were the driving factors of the evolution of African fauna, including
	early humans. In these models, major evolutionary events were associated with African climate
	change at 2.7-2.5 Ma, 1.9-1.6 Ma and 1-0.7 Ma intervals, which appear to coincide with the
	timing of key evolutionary milestones in human history. Recent scientific drilling in various
	paleolakes of the East African Rift has produced multiple high-resolution records of climate
	variability, which can be used to reconstruct the regional climate history. However, previous
	attempts to test the environmental hypotheses by applying this record directly to human evolution
	have been limited by the difficulty of linking core records directly to time-equivalent outcrops
	containing the fossil and archaeological record. We will therefore apply a novel approach
	in archaeology - a combination of tephrostratigraphic and sequence stratigraphic concepts.