Tuesday 6 May 2014

Day 3 Olorgesaillie

Today we went for a little jaunt down the Lake Magadi Road. Thankfully it was lighter traffic than the day before and we were soon back at Nairobi NP where we had to re-check our safari card. [We were so late the night before that we did not check out of teh park properly and so had to return to ensure that we were not charged an extra day.]
Olorgesaillie

It had rained overnight and the weather was cooler however the sides of the road were muddy and Gary had decided to wear his white shoes.

Our first major stop - still quite high above the valley -was for a cisticola - which we quite quickly got.

Down the valley the vegetation changed to a small leaved acacia woodland. And further still, with the climate drying - the vegetation changed further. A steady drip of new birds accompanied the chnage in habitat. Kori Bustard, Beautiful, Marico and Eastern Violet backed sunbirds plus teh striking Norther White-crowned Shrike were seen.
Blue-naped Mousebirds

Pale Chanting Goshawk, Grey capped Social Weavers and our first Sparrow Lark - Fishers were recorded in the semi arid country as we approached Olorgesaillie.

From Wikipedia; Olorgesailie is a geological formation in East Africa containing a group of Lower Paleolithic archaeological sites.[1] It is on the floor of theEastern Rift Valley in southern Kenya, 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Nairobi along the road to Lake Magadi. Olorgesailie is noted for the large number of Acheulean hand axes, associated with animal butchering, discovered there.[1] According to the National Museums of Kenya, the finds are internationally significant for archaeology, palaeontology, and geology.[2]

History


Hand axes
The artefacts were first discovered by the British geologist John Walter Gregory in 1919,[3][4] but it was not until 1943 that excavation began in earnest under the direction of Mary and Louis Leakey, with the assistance of paroled Italian prisoners of war.[5] Work continued there until 1947.Glynn Isaac took up the excavation in the 1960s[6] for his dissertation. In the 1980s, research was continued by Richard Potts of the Smithsonian Institution in conjunction with the National Museums of Kenya.

Finds


Animal fossils from Olorgesailie
Human tools are the most prominent of all historic items in the area. The abundant hand axes are characteristic of the Acheulean period, made by hominids between about 600,000 and 900,000 years ago[7]along what was then the shore of a now dried-up lake. Fossils of various animals have also been found, including those of extinct species of hippo, elephant, zebra, giraffe, and baboon, likely to have been butchered with the aid of the hand axes.[1][3]
In June 2003, a team led by Potts discovered a frontal bone in situ.[8] Other parts of the small skull (designated KNM-OL 45500) were found in following months. The frontal bone is 900,000 to 970,000 years old and probably belonged to Homo erectus, thereby making it the first human fossil found on the site.[9] The fossil remains were in the same stratigraphic level as two hand axes and several flakes, near dense deposits of hand axes.[1]
White throated Bee-eater

Geology

Preservation of the Aechulean hand axe culture was made possible by heavy falls of alkaline ash from volcanoes near the site; volcanoes that were active at the time. Mounts Suswa and Longonot are volcanoes and their vents are likely to have contributed to the ash that accumulated in the Olorgesailie basin. Subsequent sedimentation covering the site has preserved the fossils and created a stratigraphy allowing for age determination.[2] Existing temporary lakes and swamps give evidence of a humid climate during the middle Pleistocene. Sediments left by the lake cover an area of 50 square miles (about 130 square km).[2] Of the artefacts, 99% were made from locally derived lavas, particularly trachyte, although small amounts of quartziteand obsidian have been found, indicating a transport over 16 to 40 km.[10]

As we were lunching at this site Two banded Coursers, Red-fronted Warblers, D'Arnauds and Red and Yellow Barbets plus Yellow-vented Eromomelas, Slaty-coloured Boubous, White Browed Robin-chats and Grey Wren Warblers.
Slate coloured Boubou

Somali Golden chested Bunting

White-browed Scrub Robin
Capped Wheatear

Soon we were back at the hotel where we dined.

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