Markowska Monika, Vonhof Hubert B, Groucutt Huw S, Breeze Paul S, Drake Nick, Stewart Mathew, Albert Richard, Andrieux Eric, Blinkhorn James, Boivin Nicole, Budsky Alexander, Clark-Wilson Richard, Fleitmann Dominik, Gerdes Axel, Martin Ashley N, Martínez-García Alfredo, Nicholson Samuel L, Price Gilbert J, Scerri Eleanor M L, Scholz Denis, Vanwezer Nils, Weber Michael, Alsharekh Abdullah M, Al Omari Abdul Aziz, Al-Mufarreh Yahya S A, Al-Jibreen Faisal, Alqahtani Mesfer, Al-Shanti Mahmoud, Zalmout Iyad, Petraglia Michael D, Haug Gerald H
Department of Climate Geochemistry, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany.
Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Nature. 2025 Apr;640(8060):954-961. doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-08859-6. Epub 2025 Apr 9.
The Saharo-Arabian Desert is one of the largest biogeographical barriers on Earth, impeding dispersals between Africa and Eurasia, including movements of past hominins. Recent research suggests that this barrier has been in place since at least 11 million years ago. In contrast, fossil evidence from the late Miocene epoch and the Pleistocene epoch suggests the episodic presence within the Saharo-Arabian Desert interior of water-dependent fauna (for example, crocodiles, equids, hippopotamids and proboscideans), sustained by rivers and lakes that are largely absent from today's arid landscape. Although numerous humid phases occurred in southern Arabia during the past 1.1 million years, little is known about Arabia's palaeoclimate before this time. Here, based on a climatic record from desert speleothems, we show recurrent humid intervals in the central Arabian interior over the past 8 million years. Precipitation during humid intervals decreased and became more variable over time, as the monsoon's influence weakened, coinciding with enhanced Northern Hemisphere polar ice cover during the Pleistocene. Wetter conditions likely facilitated mammalian dispersals between Africa and Eurasia, with Arabia acting as a key crossroads for continental-scale biogeographic exchanges.
撒哈拉 - 阿拉伯沙漠是地球上最大的生物地理屏障之一,阻碍了非洲和欧亚大陆之间的物种扩散,包括过去古人类的迁徙。最近的研究表明,这一屏障至少在1100万年前就已存在。相比之下,中新世晚期和更新世的化石证据表明,在撒哈拉 - 阿拉伯沙漠内部曾间歇性地出现过依赖水的动物群(如鳄鱼、马科动物、河马科动物和长鼻目动物),这些动物群由如今干旱地貌中基本不存在的河流和湖泊维持生存。尽管在过去110万年里阿拉伯半岛南部出现过多次湿润期,但在此之前阿拉伯半岛的古气候情况却鲜为人知。在此,基于沙漠洞穴沉积物的气候记录,我们展示了过去800万年里阿拉伯半岛中部反复出现的湿润期。随着季风影响减弱,湿润期的降水量随时间减少且变化更大,这与更新世期间北半球极地冰盖增加相吻合。更湿润的条件可能促进了哺乳动物在非洲和欧亚大陆之间的扩散,阿拉伯半岛成为大陆规模生物地理交流的关键十字路口。