The paper starts by exploring the spatial and temporal gaps of the #primate & #hominid fossil record of Africa in the late #Miocene. @GorongosaPark in #Mozambique is shown to be a strategic location, with great potential to fill some major gaps in #paleoanthropology 2/n
We also discuss the difficulties of surveying for new paleontological localities, specially within modern forests/woodlands as in #Gorongosa, since dense vegetation cover reduces visibility (i.e. finding clues in topography and landscape). 3/n
To increase the chances of a successful discovery of fossil sites, we introduced an algorithmic pipeline. 1) Download #Landsat 8 satellite image ➜ 2) crop image to study area ➜ 3) clustering algorithm ➜ 4) binarize clusters and calculate variable importance #randomForest 4/n
4 new fossil sites were discovered in @GorongosaPark using this approach. Overall accuracy of the binarized #kmeans clusters was ~ 85%. This indicates the high potential of our remote sensing pipeline for exploratory paleontological surveys. 5/n
Relative importance of spectral bands for #clustering was determined using the randomForest algorithm, and #nearinfrared was the most important variable for fossil site detection, followed by other infrared bands. The visible spectrum are not good indicators of fossil sites. 6/n
This tool can be used for locating new fossil sites. In Gorongosa, the discovery of the first estuarine coastal forests of the #EARS fills an important paleobiogeographic gap of Africa. The new sites will be key for testing hypotheses of primate evolution in such settings. 7/n
Congratulations to Sally Reynolds and René Bobe, for this amazing new book! I’ll take this opportunity to talk a bit about the chapter I contributed to, led by @bobe_rene and co-authored by me, @carvalhoprimate and Meave Leakey.
The Koobi Fora Formation in the Lake Turkana Basin is one of the most important rock units in the world, and continues to provide one of the richest records of our evolution in Africa. #paleoanthropology
There are nearly 250 hominins documented from East Turkana. It includes periods of astonishing hominin diversity with Homo habilis, H. rudolfensis, H. erectus, and Paranthropus boisei occupying the region between 2—1.4 million years ago. #fossilfriday