Thursday, October 14, 2010

Campanian (Vesuvius) Super Volcano Offs Neanderthals








The Campanian super volcano event is the caldera on whose edge we have Mount Vesuvius.   Here we learn that this volcano produced a large scale event 40,000 years ago that made the European hinterland a very hungry place indeed.

Modern humans likely survived by relying on fish which were not so nearly affected as grazers would have been.  The Neanderthals succumbed to the collapse of the herds and outright elimination of their hunting grounds for plausibly decades.  They likely hunted themselves right out of existence.

There is a lesson here.  Our vulnerability on a continental basis is real though rare and unlikely.  Yet an effective one degree drop mobilized the barbarians and felled the Western Roman Empire.  A twenty year volcanic event at Hecla felled the rich and thriving    European Bronze age.

The modern era has the capacity to move survival resources from around the world to support the affected populations.  Again most folks survive the actual cause only to succumb the induced famine.

We have noted recently that Russia was forced to ban grain exports for this crop year because of failure.  Now imagine this continuing for a decade?  We have ways to respond at least.  Simply growing a lot of potatoes should solve the problem.

Research Suggests Volcanoes Nixed Neanderthals

by Staff Writers

Chicago Il (SPX) Oct 13, 2010

Evidence for the catastrophe comes from Mezmaiskaya cave in the Caucasus Mountains of southern Russia, a site rich in Neanderthal bones and artifacts. Recent excavations of the cave revealed two distinct layers of volcanic ash that coincide with large-scale volcanic events that occurred around 40,000 years ago, the researchers say.



New research suggests that climate change following massive volcanic eruptions drove Neanderthals to extinction and cleared the way for modern humans to thrive in Europe and Asia.

The research, led by Liubov Vitaliena Golovanova and Vladimir Borisovich Doronichev of the ANO Laboratory of Prehistory in St. Petersburg, Russia, is reported in the October issue of Current Anthropology.

"We offer the hypothesis that the Neanderthal demise occurred abruptly (on a geological time-scale) ... after the most powerful volcanic activity in western Eurasia during the period of Neanderthal evolutionary history," the researchers write.

"This catastrophe not only drastically destroyed the ecological niches of Neanderthal populations but also caused their mass physical depopulation."

Evidence for the catastrophe comes from Mezmaiskaya cave in the Caucasus Mountains of southern Russia, a site rich in Neanderthal bones and artifacts.

Recent excavations of the cave revealed two distinct layers of volcanic ash that coincide with large-scale volcanic events that occurred around 40,000 years ago, the researchers say.

Geological layers containing the ashes also hold evidence of an abrupt and potentially devastating climate change. Sediment samples from the two layers reveal greatly reduced pollen concentrations compared to surrounding layers. That's an indication of a dramatic shift to a cooler and dryer climate, the researchers say.

Further, the second of the two eruptions seems to mark the end of Neanderthal presence at Mezmaiskaya. Numerous Neanderthal bones, stone tools, and the bones of prey animals have been found in the geological layers below the second ash deposit, but none are found above it.

The ash layers correspond chronologically to what is known as the Campanian Ignimbrite super-eruption which occurred around 40,000 years ago in modern day Italy, and a smaller eruption thought to have occurred around the same time in the Caucasus Mountains.

The researchers argue that these eruptions caused a "volcanic winter" as ash clouds obscured the sun's rays, possibly for years. The climatic shift devastated the region's ecosystems, "possibly resulting in the mass death of hominins and prey animals and the severe alteration of foraging zones."

Enter Modern Humans

Anthropologists have long puzzled over the disappearance of the Neanderthals and the apparently concurrent rise of modern humans. Was there some sort of advantage that helped early modern humans out-compete their doomed cousins? This research suggests that advantage may have been simple geographic location.

"Early moderns initially occupied the more southern parts of western Eurasia and Africa and thus avoided much of the direct impact of the ... eruptions," the researchers write.

And while advances in hunting techniques and social structure clearly aided the survival of modern humans as they moved north, they "may have further benefited from the Neanderthal population vacuum in Europe, allowing wider colonization and the establishment of strong source populations in northern Eurasia."

While the researchers stress that more data from other areas in Eurasia are needed to fully test the volcanic hypothesis, they believe the Mezmaiskaya cave offers "important supporting evidence" for the idea of a volcanic extinction.

Liubov Vitaliena Golovanova, Vladimir Borisovich Doronichev, Naomi Elancia Cleghorn, Marianna Alekseevna Koulkova, Tatiana Valentinovna Sapelko, and M. Steven Shackley, "Significance of Ecological Factors in the Middle to Upper Paleolithic Transition." Current Anthropology 51:5 (October 2010).


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