Post by UKarchaeology on Aug 13, 2015 14:04:02 GMT
(2015) Humans have been found guilty of wiping out extinct beasts such as the woolly mammoth and giant armadillo, despite earlier seeming to be in the clear, scientists say.
Only last month research published in the journal Science claimed that the human race had been unjustly accused of megafauna genocide.
Instead, climate change was said to be chiefly to blame for the loss of mammoths, giant sloths, woolly rhinos and other large mammals in the last 80,000 years.
Now another team of experts claims to have settled the debate once and for all by showing that, with a few exceptions, wherever prehistoric humans went megafauna died out.
The scientists ran thousands of scenarios mapping time periods in which species became extinct and humans arrived on different continents or islands.
Climate reconstructions spanning 90,000 years were also carried out for the study, published in the journal Ecography.
Lewis Bartlett, from the University of Exeter's Centre for Ecology and Conservation, said: "As far as we are concerned, this research is the nail in the coffin of this 50-year debate - humans were the dominant cause of the extinction of megafauna.
"What we don't know is what it was about these early settlers that caused this demise. Were they killing them for food, was it early use of fire or were they driven out of their habitats? Our analysis doesn't differentiate, but we can say that it was caused by human activity more than by climate change. It debunks the myth of early humans living in harmony with nature."
In some regions of the world, mainly in Asia, extinction patterns could not be explained either by human migration or climate.
Lead scientist Dr Andrea Manica, from Cambridge University, said: "Whilst our models explain very well the timing and extent of extinctions for most of the world, mainland Asia remains a mystery. According to the fossil record, that region suffered very low rates of extinctions. Understanding why megafauna in mainland Asia is so resilient is the next big question."
(source: uk.news.yahoo.com/humans-blamed-wiping-woolly-mammoth-other-megafauna-133050845.html#0TeGmr2 )
Only last month research published in the journal Science claimed that the human race had been unjustly accused of megafauna genocide.
Instead, climate change was said to be chiefly to blame for the loss of mammoths, giant sloths, woolly rhinos and other large mammals in the last 80,000 years.
Now another team of experts claims to have settled the debate once and for all by showing that, with a few exceptions, wherever prehistoric humans went megafauna died out.
The scientists ran thousands of scenarios mapping time periods in which species became extinct and humans arrived on different continents or islands.
Climate reconstructions spanning 90,000 years were also carried out for the study, published in the journal Ecography.
Lewis Bartlett, from the University of Exeter's Centre for Ecology and Conservation, said: "As far as we are concerned, this research is the nail in the coffin of this 50-year debate - humans were the dominant cause of the extinction of megafauna.
"What we don't know is what it was about these early settlers that caused this demise. Were they killing them for food, was it early use of fire or were they driven out of their habitats? Our analysis doesn't differentiate, but we can say that it was caused by human activity more than by climate change. It debunks the myth of early humans living in harmony with nature."
In some regions of the world, mainly in Asia, extinction patterns could not be explained either by human migration or climate.
Lead scientist Dr Andrea Manica, from Cambridge University, said: "Whilst our models explain very well the timing and extent of extinctions for most of the world, mainland Asia remains a mystery. According to the fossil record, that region suffered very low rates of extinctions. Understanding why megafauna in mainland Asia is so resilient is the next big question."
(source: uk.news.yahoo.com/humans-blamed-wiping-woolly-mammoth-other-megafauna-133050845.html#0TeGmr2 )