African pluvial periods

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African pluvial periods are an obsolete system of climatic periods previously used by paleontologists working in East Africa.

Background

The sedimentary deposits left by ancient lakes in East Africa had enabled Louis Leakey and post-war paleontologists to define major climatic periods considered wet, interspersed with drier periods. Of progressively decreasing durations, they each bore the name of the site where the first clues had been collected: Kageran (Kagera), Kamasian, Kanjeran (Kanjera) and Gamblian. Paleontologists believed that the quasi-arid zones then became wooded savannahs where animals and prehistoric hunter-gatherers could thrive.

The Kagera River, on the Rwanda-Tanzania border

Chronology

These ancient climatic periods were only very approximately dated:

The Kageran takes its name from the Kagera River, which flows through Rwanda and northwestern Tanzania before flowing into Lake Victoria.

Kamasian is a district of Kenya located in the Great Rift Valley.

  • Kanjeran: Late
    Middle Pleistocene; the Kanjerian was more or less related to the Riss glaciation[1]

Kanjera is a site in Kenya located on the shores of Lake Victoria.

The term Gamblian was introduced by Louis Leakey in the 1930s.

New climatic division

These ancient climatic periods have been gradually replaced in the scientific literature by the

interglacial periods on a global scale. Interglacial periods are warmer and, therefore, wetter on average than ice ages. The latter, however, themselves experience alternations of more or less heavy rainfall, but at a much faster rate (on a geological scale) than what had originally been imagined for East Africa.[citation needed
]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Sonia Cole (1954). "The Prehistory of East Africa". American Anthropologist. 56. Londres: 1026-1050.

Bibliography