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An integrative geochronological framework for the pleistocene So'a basin (Flores, Indonesia), and its implications for faunal turnover and hominin arrival

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 17:01 authored by Gerrit D Van Den Bergh, Brent V Alloway, Michael Storey, Ruly Setiawan, Dida Yurnaldi, Iwan Kurniawan, Mark W Moore, Jatmiko, Adam Brumm, Stephanie Flude, Thomas Sutikna, Erick Setiyabudi, Unggul W Prasetyo, Mika R Puspaningrum, Ifan Yoga, Halmi Insani, Hanneke JM Meijer, Barry Kohn, Brad Pillans, Indra Sutisna, Anthony Dosseto, Susan Hayes, John A Westgate, Nick JG Pearce, Fachroel Aziz, Rokus Awe Due, Michael J Morwood
Flores represents a unique insular environment with an extensive record of Pleistocene fossil remains and stone artefacts. In the So'a Basin of central Flores these include endemic Stegodon, Komodo dragons, giant tortoises, rats, birds and hominins, and lithic artefacts that can be traced back to at least one million years ago (1 Ma). This comprehensive review presents important new data regarding the dating and faunal sequence of the So'a Basin, including the site of Mata Menge where Homo floresiensis-like fossils dating to approximately 0.7 Ma were discovered in 2014. By chemical fingerprinting key silicic tephra originating from local and distal eruptive sources we have now established basin-wide tephrostratigraphic correlations, and, together with new numerical ages, present an update of the chronostratigraphy of the So'a Basin, with major implications for the faunal sequence. These results show that a giant tortoise and the diminutive proboscidean Stegodon sondaari last occurred at the site of Tangi Talo ∼1.3 Ma, and not 0.9 Ma as previously thought. We also present new data suggesting that the disappearance of giant tortoise and S. sondaari from the sedimentary record occurred before, and/or was coincident with, the earliest hominin arrival, as evidenced by the first records of lithic artefacts occurring directly below the 1 Ma Wolo Sege Tephra. Artefacts become common in the younger layers, associated with a distinct fauna characterized by the medium-sized Stegodon florensis and giant rat Hooijeromys nusatenggara. Furthermore, we describe a newly discovered terrace fill, which extends the faunal record of Stegodon in the So'a Basin to the Late Pleistocene. Our evidence also suggests that the paleoenvironment of the So'a Basin became drier around the time of the observed faunal transition and arrival of hominins on the island, which could be related to an astronomically-forced climate response at the onset of the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT; ∼1.25 Ma) leading to increased aridity and monsoonal intensity.

Funding

Villum Fonden (0107/SIP/FRP/SM/VI/2010)

History

Journal title

Quaternary Science Reviews

Volume

294

Language

English

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