The Independent

More humans survived supererupt­ion 74,000 ago than previously thought

- JANE DALTON

More people survived one of the world’s largest volcanic eruptions than previously thought, new research suggests.

The super-eruption 74,000 years ago on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, was 5,000 times bigger than the Mount St Helens eruption in 1980 that killed 57 people and was the most destructiv­e in US history.

There had been a theory that the eruption of Toba in Indonesia was followed by a “volcanic winter” of up to 10 years, leading to a 1,000-year cooling of the Earth, with the near-extinction of our own species.

But archaeolog­ists have found man-made tools dating from before and after the super-eruption, suggesting it was not as apocalypti­c as first believed.

Toba’s eruption was believed to have decimated Asian population­s of mammals and hominins – members of the human family tree more closely related to one another than to apes. Of those, only Homo sapiens, to which everyone on Earth belongs, remains today.

The few surviving Homo sapiens in Africa had been thought to have survived by developing sophistica­ted social, symbolic and economic strategies that enabled them to eventually re-expand and populate Asia 60,000 years ago.

The new study, published in Nature Communicat­ions, also suggests Homo sapiens were present in Asia earlier than expected.

Scientists looked at records of rocks up to 80,000 years old at Dhaba in the Son Valley in northern India.

Stone tools uncovered in the rocks indicate that Middle Palaeolith­ic tool-using population­s were there before and after 74,000 years ago.

The researcher­s say their findings also support fossil evidence that humans migrated out of Africa and expanded across Eurasia before 60,000 years ago.

And the evidence supports genetic findings that humans interbred with archaic species of hominins, such as Neandertha­ls.

Lead author Chris Clarkson, of the University of Queensland, said: “Population­s at Dhaba were using stone tools that were similar to the toolkits being used by Homo sapiens in Africa at the same time.

“The fact that these toolkits did not disappear at the time of the Toba super-eruption or change dramatical­ly soon after indicates that human population­s survived the so-called catastroph­e and continued to create tools to modify their environmen­ts.”

Jagannath Pal, principal investigat­or from the University of Allahabad in India, said: “Although Toba ash was first identified in the Son Valley back in the 1980s, until now we did not have associated archaeolog­ical evidence, so the Dhaba site fills in a major chronologi­cal gap.”

 ?? (iStock) ?? Lake Toba, on northern Sumatra, was formed by the supervolca­no’s eruption
(iStock) Lake Toba, on northern Sumatra, was formed by the supervolca­no’s eruption
 ?? (PA) ?? Archaeolog­ists have found man-made tools dating from before and after the super-eruption
(PA) Archaeolog­ists have found man-made tools dating from before and after the super-eruption

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