Authors
Brigitte Senut, Martin Pickford, Loïc Ségalen
Publication date
2009/8/1
Journal
Comptes Rendus Geoscience
Volume
341
Issue
8-9
Pages
591-602
Publisher
No longer published by Elsevier
Description
Throughout the Neogene, the faunas and floras in Africa recorded global climatic changes. We present an overview of Neogene desertification in Africa by tracing stable isotopes in eggshells and mammalian enamel, by faunal (changes in hypsodonty, etc.) and floral changes in sequences at the latitudinal extremities of the continent and the equator. This work reveals that desertification started in the southwest ca 17–16Ma, much earlier than the region of the present-day Sahara (ca 8–7Ma) and long before the deserts in East Africa (Plio-Pleistocene). A consequence of this history is that animals and plants inhabiting the South of the continent had a long period of time in which to adapt to arid, unstable climatic conditions. When parts of East Africa became arid during the Late Miocene and Plio-Pleistocene, several of these lineages expanded northwards and occupied developing arid niches before local lineages …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Senut, M Pickford, L Ségalen - Comptes Rendus Geoscience, 2009