Evaluating refugia in recent human evolution in Africa: Supplementary information

Blinkhorn, James ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9399-5515, Timbrell, Lucy, Grove, Matt and Scerri, Eleanor (2022) Evaluating refugia in recent human evolution in Africa: Supplementary information. [Data Collection]

External DOI: 10.5061/dryad.sbcc2fr84

Description

Homo sapiens have adapted to an incredible diversity of habitats around the globe. This capacity to adapt to different landscapes is clearly expressed within Africa, with Late Pleistocene Homo sapiens populations occupying savannahs, woodlands, coastlines and mountainous terrain. As the only area of the world where Homo sapiens have clearly persisted through multiple glacial-interglacial cycles, Africa is the only continent where classic refugia models can be formulated and tested to examine and describe changing patterns of past distributions and human phylogeographies. The potential role of refugia has frequently been acknowledged in the Late Pleistocene palaeoanthropological literature, yet explicit identification of potential refugia has been limited by the patchy nature of palaeoenvironmental and archaeological records, and the low temporal resolution of climate or ecological models. Here, we apply potential climatic thresholds on human habitation, rooted in ethnographic studies, in combination with high resolution model datasets for precipitation and biome distributions to identify persistent refugia spanning the Late Pleistocene (130-10 thousand years ago). We present two alternate models suggesting that between 27-66% of Africa may have provided refugia to Late Pleistocene human populations, and examine variability in precipitation, biome, and ecotone distributions within these refugial zones.

Keywords: Dryad,R Code,Eastern Africa,Late Pleistocene,Stone Age,Chronometric Dating,
Depositing User: Data Catalogue Admin
Date Deposited: 26 Jan 2023 17:29
Last Modified: 26 Jan 2023 19:00
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.sbcc2fr84
Original Record Link: https://datadryad.org/stash/share/wYsyT73kQ0HVsN4IbISNDHOh7VFg2SVCdoL7r0Qjdac
URI: https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/2046

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