Michael Storey
Wild Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Storey.
Nature | 2016
Thomas Sutikna; Matthew W. Tocheri; Michael J Morwood; E. Wahyu Saptomo; Jatmiko; Rokus Due Awe; Sri Wasisto; Kira Westaway; Maxime Aubert; Bo Li; Jian-xin Zhao; Michael Storey; Brent V. Alloway; Mike W. Morley; Hanneke J. M. Meijer; Gerrit D van den Bergh; Rainer Grün; Anthony Dosseto; Adam Brumm; William L. Jungers; Richard G. Roberts
Homo floresiensis, a primitive hominin species discovered in Late Pleistocene sediments at Liang Bua (Flores, Indonesia), has generated wide interest and scientific debate. A major reason this taxon is controversial is because the H. floresiensis-bearing deposits, which include associated stone artefacts and remains of other extinct endemic fauna, were dated to between about 95 and 12 thousand calendar years (kyr) ago. These ages suggested that H. floresiensis survived until long after modern humans reached Australia by ~50 kyr ago. Here we report new stratigraphic and chronological evidence from Liang Bua that does not support the ages inferred previously for the H. floresiensis holotype (LB1), ~18 thousand calibrated radiocarbon years before present (kyr cal. bp), or the time of last appearance of this species (about 17 or 13–11 kyr cal. bp). Instead, the skeletal remains of H. floresiensis and the deposits containing them are dated to between about 100 and 60 kyr ago, whereas stone artefacts attributable to this species range from about 190 to 50 kyr in age. Whether H. floresiensis survived after 50 kyr ago—potentially encountering modern humans on Flores or other hominins dispersing through southeast Asia, such as Denisovans—is an open question.
Nature | 2016
Gerrit D van den Bergh; Bo Li; Adam Brumm; Rainer Grün; Dida Yurnaldi; Mark W. Moore; Iwan Kurniawan; Ruly Setiawan; Fachroel Aziz; Richard G. Roberts; Suyono; Michael Storey; Erick Setiabudi; Michael J Morwood
Sulawesi is the largest and oldest island within Wallacea, a vast zone of oceanic islands separating continental Asia from the Pleistocene landmass of Australia and Papua (Sahul). By one million years ago an unknown hominin lineage had colonized Flores immediately to the south, and by about 50 thousand years ago, modern humans (Homo sapiens) had crossed to Sahul. On the basis of position, oceanic currents and biogeographical context, Sulawesi probably played a pivotal part in these dispersals. Uranium-series dating of speleothem deposits associated with rock art in the limestone karst region of Maros in southwest Sulawesi has revealed that humans were living on the island at least 40 thousand years ago (ref. 5). Here we report new excavations at Talepu in the Walanae Basin northeast of Maros, where in situ stone artefacts associated with fossil remains of megafauna (Bubalus sp., Stegodon and Celebochoerus) have been recovered from stratified deposits that accumulated from before 200 thousand years ago until about 100 thousand years ago. Our findings suggest that Sulawesi, like Flores, was host to a long-established population of archaic hominins, the ancestral origins and taxonomic status of which remain elusive.
Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2016
Thomas Knott; Michael J. Branney; Marc K. Reichow; David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael Storey; Dan N. Barfod; Michael McCurry
The 1.95-km-thick Cassia Formation, defined in the Cassia Hills at the southern margin of the Snake River Plain, Idaho, consists of 12 refined and newly described rhyolitic members, each with distinctive field, geochemical, mineralogical, geochronological, and paleomagnetic characteristics. It records voluminous high-temperature, Snake River−type explosive eruptions between ca. 11.3 Ma and ca. 8.1 Ma that emplaced intensely welded rheomorphic ignimbrites and associated ash-fall layers. One ignimbrite records the ca. 8.1 Ma Castleford Crossing eruption, which was of supereruption magnitude (∼1900 km 3 ). It correlates regionally and exceeds 1.35 km thickness within a subsided, proximal caldera-like depocenter. Major- and trace-element data define three successive temporal trends toward less-evolved rhyolitic compositions, separated by abrupt returns to more-evolved compositions. These cycles are thought to reflect increasing mantle-derived basaltic intraplating and hybridization of a midcrustal region, coupled with shallower fractionation in upper-crustal magma reservoirs. The onset of each new cycle is thought to record renewed intraplating at an adjacent region of crust, possibly as the North American plate migrated westward over the Yellowstone hotspot. A regional NE-trending monocline, here termed the Cassia monocline, was formed by synvolcanic deformation and subsidence of the intracontinental Snake River basin. Its structural and topographic evolution is reconstructed using thickness variations, offlap relations, and rheomorphic transport indicators in the successive dated ignimbrites. The subsidence is thought to have occurred in response to incremental loading and modification of the crust by the mantle-derived basaltic magmas. During this time, the area also underwent NW-trending faulting related to opening of the western Snake River rift and E-W Basin and Range extension. The large eruptions probably had different source locations, all within the subsiding basin. The proximal Miocene topography was thus in marked contrast to the more elevated present-day Yellowstone plateau.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Ethan Brown; Michael J. Branney; Marc K. Reichow; Thomas Knott; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen
In this paper, we present paleomagnetic, geochemical, mineralogical, and geochronologic evidence for correlation of the mid-Miocene Cougar Point Tuff (CPT) in southwest Snake River Plain (SRP) of Idaho. The new stratigraphy presented here significantly reduces the frequency and increases the scale of known SRP ignimbrite eruptions. The CPT section exposed at the Black Rock Escarpment along the Bruneau River has been correlated eastward to the Browns Bench escarpment (six common eruption units) and Cassia Mountains (three common eruption units) regions of southern Idaho. The CPT records an unusual pattern of geomagnetic field directions that provides the basis for robust stratigraphic correlations. Paleomagnetic characterization of eruption units based on geomagnetic field variation has a resolution on the order of a few centuries, providing a strong test of whether two deposits could have been emplaced from the same eruption or from temporally separate events. To obtain reliable paleomagnetic directions, the anisotropy of anhysteretic remanence was measured to correct for magnetic anisotropy, and an efficient new method was used to remove gyroremanence acquired during alternating field demagnetization.
Nature | 2016
Adam Brumm; Gerrit D van den Bergh; Michael Storey; Iwan Kurniawan; Brent V. Alloway; Ruly Setiawan; Erick Setiyabudi; Rainer Grün; Mark W. Moore; Dida Yurnaldi; Unggul Prasetyo Wibowo; Halmi Insani; Indra Sutisna; John A. Westgate; Nicholas J. G. Pearce; Mathieu Duval; Hanneke J. M. Meijer; Fachroel Aziz; Thomas Sutikna; Sander van der Kaars; Stephanie Flude; Michael J Morwood
Gondwana Research | 2016
Quinten H.A. van der Meer; Michael Storey; James M. Scott; Tod E. Waight
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2016
Thomas Knott; Marc K. Reichow; Michael J. Branney; David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen
Geochemical Perspectives Letters | 2017
John Creech; Joel A. Baker; Monica R. Handler; Jean-Pierre Lorand; Michael Storey; A.N. Wainwright; Ambre Luguet; Frédéric Moynier; Martin Bizzarro
Nature | 2018
Laura C. Bouvier; Maria Mafalda Costa; James N. Connelly; Ninna K. Jensen; Daniel Wielandt; Michael Storey; Alexander A. Nemchin; Martin J. Whitehouse; Joshua F. Snape; Jeremy J. Bellucci; Frédéric Moynier; Arnaud Agranier; Bleuenn Gueguen; Maria Schönbächler; Martin Bizzarro
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Michael Storey