Pausata, Francesco S.R.; Alain, Dominic; Ingrosso, Roberto; Winger, Katja; Drapeau, Michelle S.M. et Burke, Ariane
(2023).
« Changes in climate extremes in Zambia during green and dry Sahara
periods and their potential impacts on hominid dispersal ».
Quaternary Science Reviews, 321(108367).
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Résumé
Northern Africa experienced humid periods known as African humid periods or Green Sahara periods during the
late Pleistocene and Holocene. The waxing and waning of the African Monsoon over the last several million years
raises the question of how the climatic variability in the African Saharan region could have influenced the
evolution and dispersion of hominins in Africa. Little is yet known about the changes in climate extremes in
central southern Africa associated with these cycles and their potential impacts on human migration. In this
study, we use a regional climate model to simulate archetypal Green and Desert Sahara periods under high and
low boreal summer insolation and investigate the resulting changes in climate variability and extremes in South
Tropical Africa, with a focus on Zambia. Our results indicate drier and warmer conditions under Green Sahara
conditions relative to the Dry Sahara periods. In particular, an increase in the length of droughts and higher
temperature extremes have been simulated over the Zambian region in the Green Sahara experiment. Our results
suggest that during the Dry Sahara periods, Zambia may have offered better environmental conditions for
hominin populations than the Central African Plateau (CAP). In contrast, the Green Sahara periods offered
opposite conditions, potentially encouraging hominins to disperse through the large river valleys into the CAP
and northward into the Sahel and Sahara.