http://m.pnas.org/content/early/2013/04/24/1301474110

Ash from the Toba supereruption in Lake Malawi shows no volcanic winter in
East Africa at 75 ka

Abstract

The most explosive volcanic event of the Quaternary was the eruption of Mt.
Toba, Sumatra, 75,000 y ago, which produced voluminous ash deposits found
across much of the Indian Ocean, Indian Peninsula, and South China Sea. A
major climatic downturn observed within the Greenland ice cores has been
attributed to the cooling effects of the ash and aerosols ejected during
the eruption of the Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT). These events coincided
roughly with a hypothesized human genetic bottleneck, when the number of
our species in Africa may have been reduced to near extinction. Some have
speculated that the demise of early modern humans at that time was due in
part to a dramatic climate shift triggered by the supereruption. Others
have argued that environmental conditions would not have been so severe to
have such an impact on our ancestors, and furthermore, that modern humans
may have already expanded beyond Africa by this time. We report an
observation of the YTT in Africa, recovered as a cryptotephra layer in Lake
Malawi sediments, >7,000 km west of the source volcano. The YTT isochron
provides an accurate and precise age estimate for the Lake Malawi
paleoclimate record, which revises the chronology of past climatic events
in East Africa. The YTT in Lake Malawi is not accompanied by a major change
in sediment composition or evidence for substantial temperature change,
implying that the eruption did not significantly impact the climate of East
Africa and was not the cause of a human genetic bottleneck at that time.

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