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Dive into the research topics where Doris Barboni is active.

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Featured researches published by Doris Barboni.


Science | 2009

The Geological, Isotopic, Botanical, Invertebrate, and Lower Vertebrate Surroundings of Ardipithecus ramidus

Giday WoldeGabriel; Stanley H. Ambrose; Doris Barboni; Raymonde Bonnefille; Laurent Bremond; Brian S. Currie; David DeGusta; William K. Hart; Alison M. Murray; Paul R. Renne; Marie-Claude Jolly-Saad; Kathlyn M. Stewart; Tim D. White

Sediments containing Ardipithecus ramidus were deposited 4.4 million years ago on an alluvial floodplain in Ethiopia’s western Afar rift. The Lower Aramis Member hominid-bearing unit, now exposed across a >9-kilometer structural arc, is sandwiched between two volcanic tuffs that have nearly identical 40Ar/39Ar ages. Geological data presented here, along with floral, invertebrate, and vertebrate paleontological and taphonomic evidence associated with the hominids, suggest that they occupied a wooded biotope over the western three-fourths of the paleotransect. Phytoliths and oxygen and carbon stable isotopes of pedogenic carbonates provide evidence of humid cool woodlands with a grassy substrate.


PLOS ONE | 2013

First Partial Skeleton of a 1.34-Million-Year-Old Paranthropus boisei from Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo; Travis Rayne Pickering; Enrique Baquedano; Audax Mabulla; Darren F. Mark; Charles Musiba; Henry T. Bunn; David Uribelarrea; Victoria C. Smith; Fernando Diez-Martín; Alfredo Pérez-González; Policarpo Sánchez; Manuel Santonja; Doris Barboni; Agness Gidna; Gail M. Ashley; José Yravedra; Jason L. Heaton; María Carmen Arriaza

Recent excavations in Level 4 at BK (Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania) have yielded nine hominin teeth, a distal humerus fragment, a proximal radius with much of its shaft, a femur shaft, and a tibia shaft fragment (cataloged collectively as OH 80). Those elements identified more specifically than to simply Hominidae gen. et sp. indet are attributed to Paranthropus boisei. Before this study, incontrovertible P. boisei partial skeletons, for which postcranial remains occurred in association with taxonomically diagnostic craniodental remains, were unknown. Thus, OH 80 stands as the first unambiguous, dentally associated Paranthropus partial skeleton from East Africa. The morphology and size of its constituent parts suggest that the fossils derived from an extremely robust individual who, at 1.338±0.024 Ma (1 sigma), represents one of the most recent occurrences of Paranthropus before its extinction in East Africa.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Controls of DSi in streams and reservoirs along the Kaveri River, South India

Jean-Dominique Meunier; Jean Riotte; Jean-Jacques Braun; M. Sekhar; F. Chalié; Doris Barboni; L. Saccone

There is an increasing body of evidence showing that land use may affect the concentration and flux of dissolved silica (DSi) and amorphous, biogenic Si particles (ASi/BSi) in surface waters. Here, we present a study of riverine waters collected within the Kaveri River Basin, which has a long history of land occupation with +43% population increase in the watershed during the last 30 years associated with agricultural practices including canal irrigation from reservoirs and, more recently, bore well pumping. We report total dissolved solids (TDS) and suspended material (TSM) for 15 river stations and 5 reservoirs along the Kaveri itself and its main tributaries sampled during pre-monsoon, monsoon and post-monsoon periods in 2006 and 2007. The TDS in the Kaveri River globally increases from the upper reaches (humid to sub-humid climate) to the lower reaches (semi-arid climate), and at a given station from monsoon (M) to hot season (HS). The DSi concentrations range from 129 μmol L(-1) (M) to 390 μmol L(-1) (HS) in the main Kaveri stream and reaches up to 686 μmol L(-1) in the Shimsha River (HS). Our results indicate that DSi and the main solutes of the Kaveri River have not drastically changed since the last 30 years despite the population increase. The pollution index of Van der Weijden and Pacheco (2006) ranges from 13% to 54% but DSi does not seem to be affected by domestic wastewater. ASi is mostly composed of diatoms and phytoliths that both play roles in controlling DSi. We suggest that DSi and ASi delivered to the cultivated areas through irrigation from reservoir may have two important consequences: increasing Si bioavailability for crops and limiting Si flux to the ocean.


The Depositional Record | 2016

Subtle signatures of seeps: Record of groundwater in a Dryland, DK, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Gail M. Ashley; Carol B. de Wet; Doris Barboni; Clayton R. Magill

Few proxies exist to identify aridity in the depositional record, although drylands cover ca 30% of the modern continental surface. New exposures in a siliciclastic and carbonate sequence in an arid to hyperarid basin at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania provide a unique multi‐proxy record of a 1·85 Ma landscape that was exploited by early humans. The 2 m thick sequence of clastics and carbonates that are exposed along a 450 m outcrop records climate change over a single precession (dry‐wet‐dry) cycle. Siliciclastic data (sedimentary structures, grain size, mineralogy) and biological data are combined with data for a 10 to 35 cm thick limestone (stable isotopes, elemental geochemistry, petrography) to generate a depositional facies model for a site DK (Douglass Korongo) on this dry rift basin landscape. This site was situated on a low gradient, distal portion of a volcaniclastic alluvial fan. The clastics are intercalated distal alluvial fan sandy silts and lake clays that accumulated in a low energy environment. Groundwater discharge and the alkaline springs and seeps during wet‐to‐dry change in climate made a freshwater carbonate‐rich environment. Bedded lithofacies (a lime mudstone with fossils) were deposited in shallow standing (spring‐fed) pools, while nodular lithofacies with calcite spherulites indicate permanently saturated ground (seeps). Both environments experienced similar diagenesis, that is, the precipitation of authigenic barite from supersaturated groundwater, desiccation and pedogenesis, and late‐stage calcite precipitation. Compositional and isotopic data suggest that a fresh groundwater‐fed system was available to early humans even during dry intervals of the precession cycle.


Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2009

Phytoliths of East African grasses: an assessment of their environmental and taxonomic significance based on floristic data.

Doris Barboni; Laurent Bremond


Quaternary Research | 2010

Phytoliths infer locally dense and heterogeneous paleovegetation at FLK North and surrounding localities during upper Bed I time, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Doris Barboni; Gail M. Ashley; Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo; Henry T. Bunn; Audax Mabulla; Enrique Baquedano


Quaternary Research | 2010

Paleoenvironmental and paleoecological reconstruction of a freshwater oasis in savannah grassland at FLK North, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Gail M. Ashley; Doris Barboni; Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo; Henry T. Bunn; Audax Mabulla; Fernando Diez-Martín; Rebeca Barba; Enrique Baquedano


Comptes Rendus Geoscience | 2012

Impact of agriculture on the Si biogeochemical cycle: Input from phytolith studies

Catherine Keller; Flore Guntzer; Doris Barboni; Jérôme Labreuche; Jean-Dominique Meunier


Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2012

Phytolith signal of aquatic plants and soils in Chad, Central Africa

Alice Novello; Doris Barboni; Laure Berti-Equille; Jean Charles Mazur; Pierre Poilecot; Patrick Vignaud


PLOS ONE | 2012

Earliest Porotic Hyperostosis on a 1.5-Million-year-old Hominin, olduvai gorge, Tanzania.

Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo; Travis Rayne Pickering; Fernando Diez-Martín; Audax Mabulla; Charles Musiba; Gonzalo J. Trancho; Enrique Baquedano; Henry T. Bunn; Doris Barboni; Manuel Santonja; David Uribelarrea; Gail M. Ashley; María del Sol Martínez-Ávila; Rebeca Barba; Agness Gidna; José Yravedra; Carmen Arriaza

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Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Henry T. Bunn

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Alice Novello

Aix-Marseille University

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David Uribelarrea

Complutense University of Madrid

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José Yravedra

Complutense University of Madrid

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Rebeca Barba

Complutense University of Madrid

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