This large interdisciplinary project involves more than 100 scientists from around the world where approximately 2,000 meters of core have been collected from Kenya and Ethiopia. Five locations were targeted for their proximity to important archaeological sites in Northern Awash and Chew Bahir (Ethiopia) and West Turkana, Tugen Hills, and Lake Magadi (Kenya). The goal was to collect continuous lacustrine paleoclimate records in the same basins as the fossils and artifacts, which would be used to understand the relationship between climate and tectonics during critical intervals of human evolution. After cores were collected and split in 2013 and 2014, the scientists realized that these lakes seemed to abruptly dry up, forming paleosols directly on top of lake sediments. I have been working with Catherine Beck (Hamilton College), Craig Feibel (Rutgers University) on the West Turkana cores, Verena Foerster (University of Cologne) on the Chew Bahir cores, and Bill Lukens (James Madison University) on the Baringo cores to use these paleosols to understand more about climate.
For more information visit the HSPDP website or watch the doccumentaries below!
This is a short documentary about HSPDP. This project aims to provide a detailed, continuous, and high resolution environmental context for human evolution in the areas where our early ancestors are known to have lived.
HSPDP also has broadcast length film for public television documenting field, lab and science findings of HSPDP produced by Earth Images Foundation and granted by the National Science Foundation!