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1.
Nature ; 630(8017): 666-670, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38839951

RESUMEN

Resolving the timescale of human activity in the Palaeolithic Age is one of the most challenging problems in prehistoric archaeology. The duration and frequency of hunter-gatherer camps reflect key aspects of social life and human-environment interactions. However, the time dimension of Palaeolithic contexts is generally inaccurately reconstructed because of the limitations of dating techniques1, the impact of disturbing agents on sedimentary deposits2 and the palimpsest effect3,4. Here we report high-resolution time differences between six Middle Palaeolithic hearths from El Salt Unit X (Spain) obtained through archaeomagnetic and archaeostratigraphic analyses. The set of hearths covers at least around 200-240 years with 99% probability, having decade- and century-long intervals between the different hearths. Our results provide a quantitative estimate of the time framework for the human occupation events included in the studied sequence. This is a step forward in Palaeolithic archaeology, a discipline in which human behaviour is usually approached from a temporal scale typical of geological processes, whereas significant change may happen at the smaller scales of human generations. Here we reach a timescale close to a human lifespan.


Asunto(s)
Arqueología , Sedimentos Geológicos , Actividades Humanas , Arqueología/métodos , Sedimentos Geológicos/análisis , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Historia Antigua , Caza/historia , España , Factores de Tiempo , Actividades Humanas/historia , Incendios/historia , Culinaria/historia
2.
Nature ; 598(7879): 82-85, 2021 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34616056

RESUMEN

New Zealand was among the last habitable places on earth to be colonized by humans1. Charcoal records indicate that wildfires were rare prior to colonization and widespread following the 13th- to 14th-century Maori settlement2, but the precise timing and magnitude of associated biomass-burning emissions are unknown1,3, as are effects on light-absorbing black carbon aerosol concentrations over the pristine Southern Ocean and Antarctica4. Here we used an array of well-dated Antarctic ice-core records to show that while black carbon deposition rates were stable over continental Antarctica during the past two millennia, they were approximately threefold higher over the northern Antarctic Peninsula during the past 700 years. Aerosol modelling5 demonstrates that the observed deposition could result only from increased emissions poleward of 40° S-implicating fires in Tasmania, New Zealand and Patagonia-but only New Zealand palaeofire records indicate coincident increases. Rapid deposition increases started in 1297 (±30 s.d.) in the northern Antarctic Peninsula, consistent with the late 13th-century Maori settlement and New Zealand black carbon emissions of 36 (±21 2 s.d.) Gg y-1 during peak deposition in the 16th century. While charcoal and pollen records suggest earlier, climate-modulated burning in Tasmania and southern Patagonia6,7, deposition in Antarctica shows that black carbon emissions from burning in New Zealand dwarfed other preindustrial emissions in these regions during the past 2,000 years, providing clear evidence of large-scale environmental effects associated with early human activities across the remote Southern Hemisphere.


Asunto(s)
Incendios/historia , Actividades Humanas/historia , Nativos de Hawái y Otras Islas del Pacífico/historia , Hollín/análisis , Atmósfera/química , Biomasa , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Nueva Zelanda , Tasmania
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(25): e2123439119, 2022 06 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35696581

RESUMEN

Pyrotechnology is a key element of hominin evolution. The identification of fire in early hominin sites relies primarily on an initial visual assessment of artifacts' physical alterations, resulting in potential underestimation of the prevalence of fire in the archaeological record. Here, we used a suite of spectroscopic techniques to counter the absence of visual signatures for fire and demonstrate the presence of burnt fauna and lithics at the Lower Paleolithic (LP) open-air site of Evron Quarry (Israel), dated between 1.0 and 0.8 Mya and roughly contemporaneous to Gesher Benot Ya'aqov where early pyrotechnology has been documented. We propose reexamining finds from other LP sites lacking visual clues of pyrotechnology to yield a renewed perspective on the origin, evolution, and spatiotemporal dispersal of the relationship between early hominin behavior and fire use.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Incendios , Hominidae , Tecnología , Animales , Arqueología , Incendios/historia , Historia Antigua , Israel , Tecnología/historia
6.
Nature ; 534(7605): 111-4, 2016 06 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27251286

RESUMEN

Very little is known about Neanderthal cultures, particularly early ones. Other than lithic implements and exceptional bone tools, very few artefacts have been preserved. While those that do remain include red and black pigments and burial sites, these indications of modernity are extremely sparse and few have been precisely dated, thus greatly limiting our knowledge of these predecessors of modern humans. Here we report the dating of annular constructions made of broken stalagmites found deep in Bruniquel Cave in southwest France. The regular geometry of the stalagmite circles, the arrangement of broken stalagmites and several traces of fire demonstrate the anthropogenic origin of these constructions. Uranium-series dating of stalagmite regrowths on the structures and on burnt bone, combined with the dating of stalagmite tips in the structures, give a reliable and replicated age of 176.5 thousand years (±2.1 thousand years), making these edifices among the oldest known well-dated constructions made by humans. Their presence at 336 metres from the entrance of the cave indicates that humans from this period had already mastered the underground environment, which can be considered a major step in human modernity.


Asunto(s)
Cuevas , Materiales de Construcción/historia , Hombre de Neandertal , Animales , Industria de la Construcción/historia , Arquitectura y Construcción de Instituciones de Salud/historia , Incendios/historia , Francia , Historia Antigua
7.
J Radiol Prot ; 40(2): 633-645, 2020 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458818

RESUMEN

A fire in a nuclear reactor at Windscale Works (Sellafield, England) in October 1957 led to an uncontrolled aerial release of radionuclides. At the time of the accident air was sampled at various locations in Europe to monitor atmospheric pollution, and the opportunity was taken to measure the sampling filters for activity concentrations of iodine-131, caesium-137 and polonium-210 at the Harwell research establishment (United Kingdom); when it was not possible to perform measurements at Harwell, original measurement data were supplied. This programme of activity measurements was performed in the context of work by the Advisory Committee on Nuclear Radiation of the International Geophysical Year (IGY; July 1957-December 1958). The International Geophysical Year was an international programme of research into a comprehensive range of geophysical phenomena. The results of this measurement programme were originally reported in Harwell Memorandum AERE-M857 (1961) and this Harwell report is reproduced in this paper because of its historical interest and because it is no longer readily accessible to researchers.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Radiactivos del Aire/historia , Incendios/historia , Reactores Nucleares/historia , Monitoreo de Radiación/historia , Liberación de Radiactividad Peligrosa/historia , Inglaterra , Europa (Continente) , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(4): 856-61, 2016 Jan 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26504219

RESUMEN

Loss of megafauna, an aspect of defaunation, can precipitate many ecological changes over short time scales. We examine whether megafauna loss can also explain features of lasting ecological state shifts that occurred as the Pleistocene gave way to the Holocene. We compare ecological impacts of late-Quaternary megafauna extinction in five American regions: southwestern Patagonia, the Pampas, northeastern United States, northwestern United States, and Beringia. We find that major ecological state shifts were consistent with expectations of defaunation in North American sites but not in South American ones. The differential responses highlight two factors necessary for defaunation to trigger lasting ecological state shifts discernable in the fossil record: (i) lost megafauna need to have been effective ecosystem engineers, like proboscideans; and (ii) historical contingencies must have provided the ecosystem with plant species likely to respond to megafaunal loss. These findings help in identifying modern ecosystems that are most at risk for disappearing should current pressures on the ecosystems' large animals continue and highlight the critical role of both individual species ecologies and ecosystem context in predicting the lasting impacts of defaunation currently underway.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Extinción Biológica , Mamíferos , Árboles , Distribución Animal , Animales , Conducta Animal , Biodiversidad , Tamaño Corporal , Cambio Climático , Incendios/historia , Fósiles , Herbivoria , Historia Antigua , América del Norte , Paleontología , Dispersión de las Plantas , Polen , América del Sur
9.
Ecol Appl ; 28(2): 284-290, 2018 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29345744

RESUMEN

An understanding of how historical fire and structure in dry forests (ponderosa pine, dry mixed conifer) varied across the western United States remains incomplete. Yet, fire strongly affects ecosystem services, and forest restoration programs are underway. We used General Land Office survey reconstructions from the late 1800s across 11 landscapes covering ~1.9 million ha in four states to analyze spatial variation in fire regimes and forest structure. We first synthesized the state of validation of our methods using 20 modern validations, 53 historical cross-validations, and corroborating evidence. These show our method creates accurate reconstructions with low errors. One independent modern test reported high error, but did not replicate our method and made many calculation errors. Using reconstructed parameters of historical fire regimes and forest structure from our validated methods, forests were found to be non-uniform across the 11 landscapes, but grouped together in three geographical areas. Each had a mixture of fire severities, but dominated by low-severity fire and low median tree density in Arizona, mixed-severity fire and intermediate to high median tree density in Oregon-California, and high-severity fire and intermediate median tree density in Colorado. Programs to restore fire and forest structure could benefit from regional frameworks, rather than one size fits all.


Asunto(s)
Incendios/historia , Bosques , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Oregon , Sudoeste de Estados Unidos
10.
Nature ; 490(7418): 85-8, 2012 Oct 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23038470

RESUMEN

Methane is an important greenhouse gas that is emitted from multiple natural and anthropogenic sources. Atmospheric methane concentrations have varied on a number of timescales in the past, but what has caused these variations is not always well understood. The different sources and sinks of methane have specific isotopic signatures, and the isotopic composition of methane can therefore help to identify the environmental drivers of variations in atmospheric methane concentrations. Here we present high-resolution carbon isotope data (δ(13)C content) for methane from two ice cores from Greenland for the past two millennia. We find that the δ(13)C content underwent pronounced centennial-scale variations between 100 BC and AD 1600. With the help of two-box model calculations, we show that the centennial-scale variations in isotope ratios can be attributed to changes in pyrogenic and biogenic sources. We find correlations between these source changes and both natural climate variability--such as the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age--and changes in human population and land use, such as the decline of the Roman empire and the Han dynasty, and the population expansion during the medieval period.


Asunto(s)
Incendios/historia , Actividades Humanas/historia , Metano/historia , Metano/metabolismo , Atmósfera/química , Biomasa , Isótopos de Carbono , Cambio Climático/historia , Groenlandia , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Sacro Imperio Romano , Hielo/análisis , Metano/análisis , Dinámica Poblacional , Mundo Romano/historia
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(43): 13261-6, 2015 Oct 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26438834

RESUMEN

Many of the largest wildfires in US history burned in recent decades, and climate change explains much of the increase in area burned. The frequency of extreme wildfire weather will increase with continued warming, but many uncertainties still exist about future fire regimes, including how the risk of large fires will persist as vegetation changes. Past fire-climate relationships provide an opportunity to constrain the related uncertainties, and reveal widespread burning across large regions of western North America during past warm intervals. Whether such episodes also burned large portions of individual landscapes has been difficult to determine, however, because uncertainties with the ages of past fires and limited spatial resolution often prohibit specific estimates of past area burned. Accounting for these challenges in a subalpine landscape in Colorado, we estimated century-scale fire synchroneity across 12 lake-sediment charcoal records spanning the past 2,000 y. The percentage of sites burned only deviated from the historic range of variability during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) between 1,200 and 850 y B.P., when temperatures were similar to recent decades. Between 1,130 and 1,030 y B.P., 83% (median estimate) of our sites burned when temperatures increased ∼0.5 °C relative to the preceding centuries. Lake-based fire rotation during the MCA decreased to an estimated 120 y, representing a 260% higher rate of burning than during the period of dendroecological sampling (360 to -60 y B.P.). Increased burning, however, did not persist throughout the MCA. Burning declined abruptly before temperatures cooled, indicating possible fuel limitations to continued burning.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático/historia , Incendios/historia , Modelos Teóricos , Carbón Orgánico/análisis , Colorado , Bosques , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Historia Medieval , Lagos , Temperatura
13.
Glob Chang Biol ; 21(6): 2296-308, 2015 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25594742

RESUMEN

The impact of Holocene drought events on the presumably stable Central African rainforest remains largely unexplored, in particular the significance of fire. High-quality sedimentary archives are scarce, and palynological records mostly integrate over large regional scales subject to different fire regimes. Here, we demonstrate a direct temporal link between Holocene droughts, palaeofire and vegetation change within present-day Central African rainforest, using records of identified charcoal fragments extracted from soil in the southern Mayumbe forest (Democratic Republic of Congo). We find three distinct periods of local palaeofire occurrence: 7.8-6.8 ka BP, 2.3-1.5 ka BP, 0.8 ka BP - present. These periods are linked to well-known Holocene drought anomalies: the 8.2 ka BP event, the 3rd millennium BP rainforest crisis and the Mediaeval Climate Anomaly. During and after these Holocene droughts, the Central African rainforest landscape was characterized by a fragmented pattern with fire-prone open patches. Some fires occurred during the drought anomalies although most fires seem to lag behind them, which suggests that the open patches remained fire-prone after the actual climate anomalies. Charcoal identifications indicate that mature rainforest patches did persist through the Early to Mid-Holocene climatic transition, the subsequent Holocene thermal optimum and the third millennium BP rainforest crisis, until 0.8 ka BP. However, disturbance and fragmentation were probably more prominent near the boundary of the southern Mayumbe forest. Furthermore, the dominance of pioneer and woodland savanna taxa in younger charcoal assemblages indicates that rainforest regeneration was hampered by increasingly severe drought conditions after 0.8 ka BP. These results support the notion of a dynamic forest ecosystem at multicentury time scales across the Central African rainforest.


Asunto(s)
Carbón Orgánico/análisis , Sequías , Incendios , Bosque Lluvioso , Cambio Climático/historia , República Democrática del Congo , Sequías/historia , Ecosistema , Incendios/historia , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Datación Radiométrica , Suelo , Árboles
14.
Glob Chang Biol ; 21(1): 445-58, 2015 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25044347

RESUMEN

Athrotaxis cupressoides is a slow-growing and long-lived conifer that occurs in the subalpine temperate forests of Tasmania, a continental island to the south of Australia. In 1960-1961, human-ignited wildfires occurred during an extremely dry summer that killed many A. cupressoides stands on the high plateau in the center of Tasmania. That fire year, coupled with subsequent regeneration failure, caused a loss of ca. 10% of the geographic extent of this endemic Tasmanian forest type. To provide historical context for these large-scale fire events, we (i) collected dendroecological, floristic, and structural data, (ii) documented the postfire survival and regeneration of A. cupressoides and co-occurring understory species, and (iii) assessed postfire understory plant community composition and flammability. We found that fire frequency did not vary following the arrival of European settlers, and that A. cupressoides populations were able to persist under a regime of low-to-mid severity fires prior to the 1960 fires. Our data indicate that the 1960 fires were (i) of greater severity than previous fires, (ii) herbivory by native marsupials may limit seedling survival in both burned and unburned A. cupressoides stands, and (iii) the loss of A. cupressoides populations is largely irreversible given the relatively high fuel loads of postfire vegetation communities that are dominated by resprouting shrubs. We suggest that the feedback between regeneration failure and increased flammability will be further exacerbated by a warmer and drier climate causing A. cupressoides to contract to the most fire-proof landscape settings.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Cupressaceae/crecimiento & desarrollo , Ecosistema , Incendios/historia , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/estadística & datos numéricos , Historia del Siglo XX , Dinámica Poblacional , Especificidad de la Especie , Tasmania
15.
Indoor Air ; 25(3): 329-40, 2015 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25065944

RESUMEN

During 13 winter weeks, an experimental archeology project was undertaken in two Danish reconstructed Viking Age houses with indoor open fireplaces. Volunteers inhabited the houses under living conditions similar to those of the Viking Age, including cooking and heating by wood fire. Carbon monoxide (CO) and particulate matter (PM2.5 ) were measured at varying distances to the fireplace. Near the fireplaces CO (mean) was 16 ppm. PM2.5 (mean) was 3.40 mg/m(3) , however, measured in one house only. The CO:PM mass ratio was found to increase from 6.4 to 22 when increasing the distance to the fire. Two persons carried CO sensors. Average personal exposure was 6.9 ppm, and from this, a personal PM2.5 exposure of 0.41 mg/m(3) was estimated. The levels found here were higher than reported from modern studies conducted in dwellings using biomass for cooking and heating. While this may be due to the Viking house design, the volunteer's lack of training in attending a fire maybe also played a role. Even so, when comparing to today's issues arising from the use of open fires, it must be assumed that also during the Viking Age, the exposure to woodsmoke was a contributing factor to health problems.


Asunto(s)
Contaminación del Aire Interior/análisis , Calefacción/métodos , Vivienda/historia , Exposición por Inhalación/análisis , Humo/análisis , Adulto , Contaminación del Aire Interior/historia , Biomasa , Monóxido de Carbono/análisis , Culinaria/historia , Culinaria/métodos , Dinamarca , Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Incendios/historia , Calefacción/efectos adversos , Calefacción/historia , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Exposición por Inhalación/historia , Material Particulado/análisis , Estaciones del Año , Humo/efectos adversos , Madera
16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(3): 847-52, 2012 Jan 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22184249

RESUMEN

Human ability to manipulate fire and the landscape has increased over evolutionary time, but the impact of this on fire regimes and consequences for biodiversity and biogeochemistry are hotly debated. Reconstructing historical changes in human-derived fire regimes empirically is challenging, but information is available on the timing of key human innovations and on current human impacts on fire; here we incorporate this knowledge into a spatially explicit fire propagation model. We explore how changes in population density, the ability to create fire, and the expansion of agropastoralism altered the extent and seasonal distribution of fire as modern humans arose and spread through Africa. Much emphasis has been placed on the positive effect of population density on ignition frequency, but our model suggests this is less important than changes in fire spread and connectivity that would have occurred as humans learned to light fires in the dry season and to transform the landscape through grazing and cultivation. Different landscapes show different limitations; we show that substantial human impacts on burned area would only have started ~4,000 B.P. in open landscapes, whereas they could have altered fire regimes in closed/dissected landscapes by ~40,000 B.P. Dry season fires have been the norm for the past 200-300 ky across all landscapes. The annual area burned in Africa probably peaked between 4 and 40 kya. These results agree with recent paleocarbon studies that suggest that the biomass burned today is less than in the recent past in subtropical countries.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Incendios/historia , África , Historia Antigua , Actividades Humanas , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Estaciones del Año , Procesos Estocásticos
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(20): E1215-20, 2012 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22474385

RESUMEN

The ability to control fire was a crucial turning point in human evolution, but the question when hominins first developed this ability still remains. Here we show that micromorphological and Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (mFTIR) analyses of intact sediments at the site of Wonderwerk Cave, Northern Cape province, South Africa, provide unambiguous evidence--in the form of burned bone and ashed plant remains--that burning took place in the cave during the early Acheulean occupation, approximately 1.0 Ma. To the best of our knowledge, this is the earliest secure evidence for burning in an archaeological context.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Cultural , Incendios/historia , Fósiles , Hominidae/fisiología , Comportamiento del Uso de la Herramienta/fisiología , Animales , Antropología , Historia Antigua , Humanos , Microespectrofotometría , Sudáfrica
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(20): 7648-53, 2012 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22547791

RESUMEN

The controversial Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that at the onset of the Younger Dryas an extraterrestrial impact over North America caused a global catastrophe. The main evidence for this impact--after the other markers proved to be neither reproducible nor consistent with an impact--is the alleged occurrence of several nanodiamond polymorphs, including the proposed presence of lonsdaleite, a shock polymorph of diamond. We examined the Usselo soil horizon at Geldrop-Aalsterhut (The Netherlands), which formed during the Allerød/Early Younger Dryas and would have captured such impact material. Our accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates of 14 individual charcoal particles are internally consistent and show that wildfires occurred well after the proposed impact. In addition we present evidence for the occurrence of cubic diamond in glass-like carbon. No lonsdaleite was found. The relation of the cubic nanodiamonds to glass-like carbon, which is produced during wildfires, suggests that these nanodiamonds might have formed after, rather than at the onset of, the Younger Dryas. Our analysis thus provides no support for the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.


Asunto(s)
Desastres/historia , Incendios/historia , Sedimentos Geológicos/análisis , Meteoroides , Nanodiamantes/historia , Nanodiamantes/ultraestructura , Geología , Historia Antigua , Espectrometría de Masas , Microscopía Electrónica de Rastreo , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión , Países Bajos , Aceleradores de Partículas , Datación Radiométrica , Factores de Tiempo
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(9): E535-43, 2012 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22334650

RESUMEN

Understanding the causes and consequences of wildfires in forests of the western United States requires integrated information about fire, climate changes, and human activity on multiple temporal scales. We use sedimentary charcoal accumulation rates to construct long-term variations in fire during the past 3,000 y in the American West and compare this record to independent fire-history data from historical records and fire scars. There has been a slight decline in burning over the past 3,000 y, with the lowest levels attained during the 20th century and during the Little Ice Age (LIA, ca. 1400-1700 CE [Common Era]). Prominent peaks in forest fires occurred during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (ca. 950-1250 CE) and during the 1800s. Analysis of climate reconstructions beginning from 500 CE and population data show that temperature and drought predict changes in biomass burning up to the late 1800s CE. Since the late 1800s , human activities and the ecological effects of recent high fire activity caused a large, abrupt decline in burning similar to the LIA fire decline. Consequently, there is now a forest "fire deficit" in the western United States attributable to the combined effects of human activities, ecological, and climate changes. Large fires in the late 20th and 21st century fires have begun to address the fire deficit, but it is continuing to grow.


Asunto(s)
Incendios/historia , Biomasa , Carbón Orgánico/análisis , Cambio Climático/historia , Sequías , Sedimentos Geológicos/análisis , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Actividades Humanas/historia , Actividades Humanas/tendencias , Humanos , Sudoeste de Estados Unidos , Temperatura , Árboles/crecimiento & desarrollo
20.
Glob Chang Biol ; 20(9): 2903-14, 2014 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24677504

RESUMEN

Rainfall controls fire in tropical savanna ecosystems through impacting both the amount and flammability of plant biomass, and consequently, predicted changes in tropical precipitation over the next century are likely to have contrasting effects on the fire regimes of wet and dry savannas. We reconstructed the long-term dynamics of biomass burning in equatorial East Africa, using fossil charcoal particles from two well-dated lake-sediment records in western Uganda and central Kenya. We compared these high-resolution (5 years/sample) time series of biomass burning, spanning the last 3800 and 1200 years, with independent data on past hydroclimatic variability and vegetation dynamics. In western Uganda, a rapid (<100 years) and permanent increase in burning occurred around 2170 years ago, when climatic drying replaced semideciduous forest by wooded grassland. At the century time scale, biomass burning was inversely related to moisture balance for much of the next two millennia until ca. 1750 ad, when burning increased strongly despite regional climate becoming wetter. A sustained decrease in burning since the mid20th century reflects the intensified modern-day landscape conversion into cropland and plantations. In contrast, in semiarid central Kenya, biomass burning peaked at intermediate moisture-balance levels, whereas it was lower both during the wettest and driest multidecadal periods of the last 1200 years. Here, burning steadily increased since the mid20th century, presumably due to more frequent deliberate ignitions for bush clearing and cattle ranching. Both the observed historical trends and regional contrasts in biomass burning are consistent with spatial variability in fire regimes across the African savanna biome today. They demonstrate the strong dependence of East African fire regimes on both climatic moisture balance and vegetation, and the extent to which this dependence is now being overridden by anthropogenic activity.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Incendios/historia , Pradera , Biomasa , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia Antigua , Kenia , Lluvia , Clima Tropical , Uganda
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