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Featured researches published by Giday WoldeGabriel.


Science | 2009

Ardipithecus ramidus and the Paleobiology of Early Hominids

Tim D. White; Berhane Asfaw; Yonas Beyene; Yohannes Haile-Selassie; C. Owen Lovejoy; Gen Suwa; Giday WoldeGabriel

Hominid fossils predating the emergence of Australopithecus have been sparse and fragmentary. The evolution of our lineage after the last common ancestor we shared with chimpanzees has therefore remained unclear. Ardipithecus ramidus, recovered in ecologically and temporally resolved contexts in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, now illuminates earlier hominid paleobiology and aspects of extant African ape evolution. More than 110 specimens recovered from 4.4-million-year-old sediments include a partial skeleton with much of the skull, hands, feet, limbs, and pelvis. This hominid combined arboreal palmigrade clambering and careful climbing with a form of terrestrial bipedality more primitive than that of Australopithecus. Ar. ramidus had a reduced canine/premolar complex and a little-derived cranial morphology and consumed a predominantly C3 plant–based diet (plants using the C3 photosynthetic pathway). Its ecological habitat appears to have been largely woodland-focused. Ar. ramidus lacks any characters typical of suspension, vertical climbing, or knuckle-walking. Ar. ramidus indicates that despite the genetic similarities of living humans and chimpanzees, the ancestor we last shared probably differed substantially from any extant African ape. Hominids and extant African apes have each become highly specialized through very different evolutionary pathways. This evidence also illuminates the origins of orthogrady, bipedality, ecology, diet, and social behavior in earliest Hominidae and helps to define the basal hominid adaptation, thereby accentuating the derived nature of Australopithecus.


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2007

Analysis and performance of oil well cement with 30 years of CO2 exposure from the SACROC Unit, West Texas, USA

J. William Carey; M. O. Wigand; S. J. Chipera; Giday WoldeGabriel; Rajesh J. Pawar; Peter C. Lichtner; Scott C. Wehner; Michael A. Raines; George D. Guthrie

Abstract A core sample including casing, cement, and shale caprock was obtained from a 30-year old CO2-flooding operation at the SACROC Unit, located in West Texas. The core was investigated as part of a program to evaluate the integrity of Portland-cement based wellbore systems in CO2-sequestration environments. The recovered cement had air permeabilities in the tenth of a milliDarcy range and thus retained its capacity to prevent significant flow of CO2. There was evidence, however, for CO2 migration along both the casing–cement and cement–shale interfaces. A 0.1–0.3 cm thick carbonate precipitate occurs adjacent to the casing. The CO2 producing this deposit may have traveled up the casing wall or may have infiltrated through the casing threads or points of corrosion. The cement in contact with the shale (0.1–1 cm thick) was heavily carbonated to an assemblage of calcite, aragonite, vaterite, and amorphous alumino-silica residue and was transformed to a distinctive orange color. The CO2 causing this reaction originated by migration along the cement–shale interface where the presence of shale fragments (filter cake) may have provided a fluid pathway. The integrity of the casing–cement and cement–shale interfaces appears to be the most important issue in the performance of wellbore systems in a CO2 sequestration reservoir.


Nature | 2003

Stratigraphic, chronological and behavioural contexts of Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash, Ethiopia

J. Desmond Clark; Yonas Beyene; Giday WoldeGabriel; William K. Hart; Paul R. Renne; Henry Gilbert; Alban Defleur; Gen Suwa; Shigehiro Katoh; Kenneth R. Ludwig; Jean-Renaud Boisserie; Berhane Asfaw; Tim D. White

Clarifying the geographic, environmental and behavioural contexts in which the emergence of anatomically modern Homo sapiens occurred has proved difficult, particularly because Africa lacked adequate geochronological, palaeontological and archaeological evidence. The discovery of anatomically modern Homo sapiens fossils at Herto, Ethiopia, changes this. Here we report on stratigraphically associated Late Middle Pleistocene artefacts and fossils from fluvial and lake margin sandstones of the Upper Herto Member of the Bouri Formation, Middle Awash, Afar Rift, Ethiopia. The fossils and artefacts are dated between 160,000 and 154,000 years ago by precise age determinations using the 40Ar/39Ar method. The archaeological assemblages contain elements of both Acheulean and Middle Stone Age technocomplexes. Associated faunal remains indicate repeated, systematic butchery of hippopotamus carcasses. Contemporary adult and juvenile Homo sapiens fossil crania manifest bone modifications indicative of deliberate mortuary practices.


Journal of the Geological Society | 1993

Late Eocene–Recent volcanism and faulting in the southern main Ethiopian rift

C. Ebinger; T. Yemane; Giday WoldeGabriel; James L. Aronson; Robert C. Walter

Few constraints on the timing, amount and distribution of lithospheric extension associated with flood-basalt magmatism were available from the southern Main Ethiopian rift system, where the base of the Cenozoic volcanic succession is exposed by faulting. New structural observations, together with K–Ar and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology data from a transect of the Chamo basin–Amaro horst–Galana basin, show that basins are bounded by faults with steep dips at the surface, and the stratal dips of Eocene–Recent volcanic and sedimentary units are generally less than 20°. Little or no extension accompanied the extrusion of a 0.5 to 1 km thick sequence of transitional tholeiitic flood basalts between 45 and 35 Ma. Stratigraphical correlations with basins to the north and southwest suggest that felsic eruption(s) at c. 37 Ma blanketed much of the southern Ethiopian plateau region with a felsic tuff unit. A second, less widespread, episode of alkali basalt and trachyte volcanism occurred between 18 and 11 Ma, and Recent alkali basalt volcanism occurs within the Chamo basin. The attitude, distribution, and diversity of Neo–gene–Recent volcanic and sedimentary strata within the Chamo and Galana basins indicate that crustal extension, basin subsidence, and rift flank uplift began during or after the second flood-basalt phase. Based on cross-sectional reconstruction to the top of the Oligocene tuff, we estimate a minimum of 12 km crustal extension (β ≈ 1.12), and infer that maximum extension across the southern Ethiopian rift is less than 25 km. Extension is primarily accommodated by slip along the border faults bounding the asymmetric basins, with small amounts of extension occurring within the hanging walls. Crude estimates of original basalt layer thickness prior to erosion in the Amaro region suggest that roughly comparable volumes of basaltic material erupted during the two episodes of flood-basalt magmatism (45–35 Ma and 18–11 Ma). The small amounts of lithospheric extension and the large volumes of magma estimated in this study of the southern Main Ethiopian rift suggest a very hot plume and/or efficient thinning of the mantle lithosphere from below by mantle plume processes during the two discrete episodes of flood-basalt volcanism.


Nature | 2006

Asa issie, aramis and the origin of Australopithecus

Tim D. White; Giday WoldeGabriel; Berhane Asfaw; Stan Ambrose; Yonas Beyene; Raymond L. Bernor; Jean-Renaud Boisserie; Brian S. Currie; Henry Gilbert; Yohannes Haile-Selassie; William K. Hart; Leslea J. Hlusko; F. Clark Howell; Reiko T. Kono; Thomas Lehmann; Antoine Louchart; C. Owen Lovejoy; Paul R. Renne; Haruo Saegusa; Elisabeth S. Vrba; Hank Wesselman; Gen Suwa

The origin of Australopithecus, the genus widely interpreted as ancestral to Homo, is a central problem in human evolutionary studies. Australopithecus species differ markedly from extant African apes and candidate ancestral hominids such as Ardipithecus, Orrorin and Sahelanthropus. The earliest described Australopithecus species is Au. anamensis, the probable chronospecies ancestor of Au. afarensis. Here we describe newly discovered fossils from the Middle Awash study area that extend the known Au. anamensis range into northeastern Ethiopia. The new fossils are from chronometrically controlled stratigraphic sequences and date to about 4.1–4.2 million years ago. They include diagnostic craniodental remains, the largest hominid canine yet recovered, and the earliest Australopithecus femur. These new fossils are sampled from a woodland context. Temporal and anatomical intermediacy between Ar. ramidus and Au. afarensis suggest a relatively rapid shift from Ardipithecus to Australopithecus in this region of Africa, involving either replacement or accelerated phyletic evolution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

The characteristics and chronology of the earliest Acheulean at Konso, Ethiopia

Yonas Beyene; Shigehiro Katoh; Giday WoldeGabriel; William K. Hart; Kozo Uto; Masafumi Sudo; Megumi Kondo; Masayuki Hyodo; Paul R. Renne; Gen Suwa; Berhane Asfaw

The Acheulean technological tradition, characterized by a large (>10 cm) flake-based component, represents a significant technological advance over the Oldowan. Although stone tool assemblages attributed to the Acheulean have been reported from as early as circa 1.6–1.75 Ma, the characteristics of these earliest occurrences and comparisons with later assemblages have not been reported in detail. Here, we provide a newly established chronometric calibration for the Acheulean assemblages of the Konso Formation, southern Ethiopia, which span the time period ∼1.75 to <1.0 Ma. The earliest Konso Acheulean is chronologically indistinguishable from the assemblage recently published as the world’s earliest with an age of ∼1.75 Ma at Kokiselei, west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. This Konso assemblage is characterized by a combination of large picks and crude bifaces/unifaces made predominantly on large flake blanks. An increase in the number of flake scars was observed within the Konso Formation handaxe assemblages through time, but this was less so with picks. The Konso evidence suggests that both picks and handaxes were essential components of the Acheulean from its initial stages and that the two probably differed in function. The temporal refinement seen, especially in the handaxe forms at Konso, implies enhanced function through time, perhaps in processing carcasses with long and stable cutting edges. The documentation of the earliest Acheulean at ∼1.75 Ma in both northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia suggests that behavioral novelties were being established in a regional scale at that time, paralleling the emergence of Homo erectus-like hominid morphology.


Nature | 2001

Geology and palaeontology of the Late Miocene Middle Awash valley, Afar rift, Ethiopia

Giday WoldeGabriel; Yohannes Haile-Selassie; Paul R. Renne; William K. Hart; Stanley H. Ambrose; Berhane Asfaw; Grant Heiken; Tim D. White

The Middle Awash study area of Ethiopias Afar rift has yielded abundant vertebrate fossils (≈ 10,000), including several hominid taxa. The study area contains a long sedimentary record spanning Late Miocene (5.3–11.2 Myr ago) to Holocene times. Exposed in a unique tectonic and volcanic transition zone between the main Ethiopian rift (MER) and the Afar rift, sediments along the western Afar rift margin in the Middle Awash provide a unique window on the Late Miocene of Ethiopia. These deposits have now yielded the earliest hominids, described in an accompanying paper and dated here to between 5.54 and 5.77 Myr. These geological and palaeobiological data from the Middle Awash provide fresh perspectives on hominid origins and early evolution. Here we show that these earliest hominids derive from relatively wet and wooded environments that were modulated by tectonic, volcanic, climatic and geomorphic processes. A similar wooded habitat also has been suggested for the 6.0 Myr hominoid fossils recently recovered from Lukeino, Kenya. These findings require fundamental reassessment of models that invoke a significant role for global climatic change and/or savannah habitat in the origin of hominids.


Nature | 2011

Extended megadroughts in the southwestern United States during Pleistocene interglacials

Peter J. Fawcett; Josef P. Werne; R. Scott Anderson; Jeffrey M. Heikoop; Erik T. Brown; Melissa A. Berke; Susan J. Smith; Fraser Goff; Linda Donohoo-Hurley; Luz Maria Cisneros-Dozal; Stefan Schouten; Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté; Yongsong Huang; Jaime Toney; Julianna Eileen Fessenden; Giday WoldeGabriel; Viorel Atudorei; John W. Geissman; Craig D. Allen

The potential for increased drought frequency and severity linked to anthropogenic climate change in the semi-arid regions of the southwestern United States (US) is a serious concern. Multi-year droughts during the instrumental period and decadal-length droughts of the past two millennia were shorter and climatically different from the future permanent, ‘dust-bowl-like’ megadrought conditions, lasting decades to a century, that are predicted as a consequence of warming. So far, it has been unclear whether or not such megadroughts occurred in the southwestern US, and, if so, with what regularity and intensity. Here we show that periods of aridity lasting centuries to millennia occurred in the southwestern US during mid-Pleistocene interglacials. Using molecular palaeotemperature proxies to reconstruct the mean annual temperature (MAT) in mid-Pleistocene lacustrine sediment from the Valles Caldera, New Mexico, we found that the driest conditions occurred during the warmest phases of interglacials, when the MAT was comparable to or higher than the modern MAT. A collapse of drought-tolerant C4 plant communities during these warm, dry intervals indicates a significant reduction in summer precipitation, possibly in response to a poleward migration of the subtropical dry zone. Three MAT cycles ∼2 °C in amplitude occurred within Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 and seem to correspond to the muted precessional cycles within this interglacial. In comparison with MIS 11, MIS 13 experienced higher precessional-cycle amplitudes, larger variations in MAT (4–6 °C) and a longer period of extended warmth, suggesting that local insolation variations were important to interglacial climatic variability in the southwestern US. Comparison of the early MIS 11 climate record with the Holocene record shows many similarities and implies that, in the absence of anthropogenic forcing, the region should be entering a cooler and wetter phase.


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.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 1999

Chronostratigraphy of the Miocene–Pliocene Sagantole Formation, Middle Awash Valley, Afar rift, Ethiopia

Paul R. Renne; Giday WoldeGabriel; William K. Hart; Grant Heiken; Tim D. White

The Sagantole Formation comprises more than 200 m of lacustrine, alluvial, and volcaniclastic sediments, plus compositionally bimodal tephras and basaltic lavas, exposed in a domelike horst named the Central Awash Complex in the southwestern Afar rift of Ethiopia. The Sagantole Formation is widely known for abundant vertebrate faunas, including the 4.4 Ma primitive hominid Ardipithecus ramidus . New lithostratigraphic data are used to subdivide the Sagantole Formation into the Kuseralee, Gawto, Haradaso, Aramis, Beidareem, Adgantole, and Belohdelie Members, in ascending order. The members are defined on the basis of lithologic differences and laterally continuous bounding tephras. 40 Ar/ 39 Ar dating of 12 intercalated volcanic units firmly establishes the age of the Sagantole Formation to be 5.6 to 3.9 Ma, significantly older than previous proposals based on erroneous correlations. Magnetostratigraphic data reveal eight paleomagnetic polarity zones, which can be correlated unambiguously with the Thvera, Sidufjall, Nunivak, and Cochiti Subchrons of the Gilbert Chron. Thus, by reference to the geomagnetic polarity time scale, seven additional chronological datums can be placed in the Sagantole Formation. With a total of 19 such datums, the age resolution anywhere in the Sagantole Formation is better than ±100 k.y., making this the best-dated Miocene–Pliocene succession in Africa.

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Tim D. White

University of California

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Paul R. Renne

Berkeley Geochronology Center

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Berhane Asfaw

University of California

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Fraser Goff

University of New Mexico

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Jeffrey M. Heikoop

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Craig D. Allen

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Yohannes Haile-Selassie

Cleveland Museum of Natural History

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