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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
James Russell

James Russell

Brown University · Geology

Active 1980–2024

h-index71
Citations24.2k
Papers425158 last 5y
Funding$3.1M2 active
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Research topics

  • Geography
  • Geology
  • Oceanography
  • Paleontology
  • Biology
  • Physical geography
  • Computer Science
  • Earth science
  • Climatology
  • Ecology
  • Engineering
  • Archaeology
  • Evolutionary biology

Selected publications

  • The palaeoclimate potential of continental scientific drilling

    Nature Geoscience · 2024

    • Geology
    • Earth science
    • Oceanography
  • Reconstructing the Environmental Context of Human Origins in Eastern Africa Through Scientific Drilling

    Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences · 2022 · 32 citations

    • Paleontology
    • Geology
    • Archaeology

    Paleoanthropologists have long speculated about the role of environmental change in shaping human evolution in Africa. In recent years, drill cores of late Neogene lacustrine sedimentary rocks have yielded valuable high-resolution records of climatic and ecosystem change. Eastern African Rift sediments (primarily lake beds) provide an extraordinary range of data in close proximity to important fossil hominin and archaeological sites, allowing critical study of hypotheses that connect environmental history and hominin evolution. We review recent drill-core studies spanning the Plio–Pleistocene boundary (an interval of hominin diversification, including the earliest members of our genus Homo and the oldest stone tools), and the Mid–Upper Pleistocene (spanning the origin of Homo sapiens in Africa and our early technological and dispersal history). Proposed drilling of Africa's oldest lakes promises to extend such records back to the late Miocene. ▪ High-resolution paleoenvironmental records are critical for understanding external drivers of human evolution. ▪ African lake basin drill cores play a critical role in enhancing hominin paleoenvironmental records given their continuity and proximity to key paleoanthropological sites. ▪ The oldest African lakes have the potential to reveal a comprehensive paleoenvironmental context for the entire late Neogene history of hominin evolution.

  • Orbital controls on eastern African hydroclimate in the Pleistocene

    Scientific Reports · 2022 · 44 citations

    • Climatology
    • Geology
    • Physical geography

    Understanding eastern African paleoclimate is critical for contextualizing early human evolution, adaptation, and dispersal, yet Pleistocene climate of this region and its governing mechanisms remain poorly understood due to the lack of long, orbitally-resolved, terrestrial paleoclimate records. Here we present leaf wax hydrogen isotope records of rainfall from paleolake sediment cores from key time windows that resolve long-term trends, variations, and high-latitude effects on tropical African precipitation. Eastern African rainfall was dominantly controlled by variations in low-latitude summer insolation during most of the early and middle Pleistocene, with little evidence that glacial-interglacial cycles impacted rainfall until the late Pleistocene. We observe the influence of high-latitude-driven climate processes emerging from the last interglacial (Marine Isotope Stage 5) to the present, an interval when glacial-interglacial cycles were strong and insolation forcing was weak. Our results demonstrate a variable response of eastern African rainfall to low-latitude insolation forcing and high-latitude-driven climate change, likely related to the relative strengths of these forcings through time and a threshold in monsoon sensitivity. We observe little difference in mean rainfall between the early, middle, and late Pleistocene, which suggests that orbitally-driven climate variations likely played a more significant role than gradual change in the relationship between early humans and their environment.

  • Abrupt climate change and its influences on hominin evolution during the early Pleistocene in the Turkana Basin, Kenya

    Quaternary Science Reviews · 2020 · 36 citations

    • Climatology
    • Geology
    • Physical geography
  • Increased ecological resource variability during a critical transition in hominin evolution

    Science Advances · 2020 · 114 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Ecology
    • Evolutionary biology

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Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Hendrik Vogel

    University of Bern

    118 shared
  • Yongsong Huang

    106 shared
  • Satria Bijaksana

    Bandung Institute of Technology

    93 shared
  • Dirk Verschuren

    91 shared
  • Hilde Eggermont

    90 shared
  • Mathieu Schuster

    Université de Strasbourg

    72 shared
  • D. R. Engstrom

    72 shared
  • Tiegang Li

    First Institute of Oceanography

    72 shared
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