Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 February 2018

New insight on the formation of East Asian flora


Wu & Wu (1996) first proposed the former "Eastern Asiatic region" to be an independent floristic Kingdom, the "East Asiatic Floristic Kingdom". It is significant to the definition of the Floristic regions of the world. However, there are still some questions need to be discussed.

New insight on the formation of East Asian flora
These are floristic regions of the Eastern Asiatic Floristic Kingdom and its two subkingdoms (A & B) based
on Wu and Wu (1996) (7). White dashed lines (A) demarcate boundaries of two floristic subkingdoms;
Photos of living plants (B) are the representatives of each subkingdom; (a) Gentiana, (b) Corydalis,
(c) Primula, (d) Pedicularis, (e) Rhodiola, (f) Saxifraga, (g) Rhododendron, (h) Eucommia,
(i) Cercidiphyllum, (j) Ginkgo, (k) Trochodendron, (l) Cathaya, (m) Davidia, (n) Metasequoia
[Credit: © Science China Press]
As many living fossil plants (Cenozoic plant relicts) only occurred in East Asian today, many researchers have suggested that the East Asiatic Floristic is an ancient flora and the cradle of North American, European floras and even the modern Paleo-tropical flora .

In addition, East Asia has also been considered to be the diversification or origin center of angiosperms. Besides this, as most paleoendemic taxa of the East Asiatic Floristic occurred in the Sino-Japanese flora and neoendemic taxa were concentrated in the Sino-Himalayan flora. Previous studies suggested that the Sino-Japanese flora is older than the Sino-Himalayan flora. Are these hypothesis true or not? However, until today these questions have not been solved well, due to the limitation of research methods and materials.

On the basis of previous studies, Prof. Sun Hang's Group from Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences (KIB/CAS), propose the term "Metasequoia Flora" to represent the core area of the Sino-Japanese Flora. Since the living fossil plant Metasequoia glyptostroboides is one representative of the relicts or living fossil lineages that are found in this area. Similarly, They propose the term "Rhododendron Flora" to better represent the core region of the Sino-Himalayan flora, as Rhododendron is the largest genus and formed a diversity center in this region, plus it is a representative plant of the flora in this area.

New insight on the formation of East Asian flora
These are geographical origins of the East Asian flora. Pie chart illustrate the percent of taxa originated in situ,
ambiguous origin and immigrants from other flora. Arrows indicate the biogeographical origin of East Asian
elements from other region. Photos of living plants are the representatives of different geographical origins;
 (a) Cyananthus, (b) Cotinus, (c) Rhodiola, (d) Ilex, (e) Stachyuraceae, (f) Hamamelis, (g) Coriaria,
(h) Helleborus, (i) Mandragora, (j) Cissus, (k) Hypericum, (l) Viburnum, (m) Musa, (n) Alangium,
(o) Myriophyllum, (p) Disporum, (q) Carya, (r) Schima, (s) Rhus, (t) Adenocaulon, (u) Smilax,
 (v) Diapensia, (w) Cassiope [Credit: © Science China Press]
On the basis above, the group first synthesized published molecular phylogenetic data as well as fossil information on the seed plants, try to trace the temporal and spatial evolution of East Asian flora by integrating these datasets with paleo environmental studies that are related to this area.

The results suggest that the East Asian might be relatively young, with most of its clades originating since the Miocene, it should be the refugia for ancient relict plants rather than the birthplace. The Rhododendron Flora and the Metasequoia Flora are probably of a similar age.

The formation and development of the Asian monsoon might have been the main factors that drive the evolution of East Asian flora. The unequal distribution of species diversity in Rhododendron and Metasequoia flora may be due to the diverse and heterogeneous topography and climate of this region caused by the uplift of Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. Meanwhile, this phenomenon may be also correlated with the direction of mountains ranges in these regions. The East Asian flora appears to have multiple biogeographical origins, being closely affiliations not only with other floras in the Northern Hemisphere, but also with Gondwanan floras.

The study results are published in National Science Review.

Source: Science China Press [February 27, 2018]

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Friday, 23 February 2018

7th-century Japan site yields traces of grand banquet hall for nobility


Researchers found evidence of an oblong structure from the Asuka Period (592-710) that was likely part of a banquet hall complex for the nobility described in an eighth century official history of Japan.

7th-century Japan site yields traces of grand banquet hall for nobility
The pits in the ground suggest the ancient structure in Asuka, Nara Prefecture,
measured at least 19.2 meters west to east [Credit: Yoshinori Mizuno]
The building dates from when Asuka served as the nation's capital, and its existence was announced by the education board of the Asuka village government on Feb. 21.

Researchers uncovered pits in the ground for 16 wooden pillars in the Asukadera Seiho site, which lies west of the old Asukadera temple. The pits were uncovered in the northwest part of the archaeological site and are believed to date from the seventh century.

The pits measure between 90 centimeters and 135 cm across. The placement of the pillars suggests the banquet hall measured at least 19.2 meters west to east and 4.8 meters south to north.

The old Asukadera temple is thought to have been the first Buddhist temple founded in Japan. The area west of the temple is considered to be the site of “Tsukinoki no Hiroba,” or famed square of zelkova trees mentioned in “Nihon Shoki” (The Chronicles of Japan), completed in the eighth century.

The book describes banquets held in the square in the latter half of the seventh century for people invited from the outskirts of the kingdom, including the Emishi from today’s Tohoku region and the Hayato from the southern Kyushu region.

Kanekatsu Inokuma, professor emeritus of archeology at Kyoto Tachibana University, believes “the square was a functional venue for various rituals,” adding that the discovery ties in with historical accounts of banquets hosted for the Emishi and Hayato people, with sumo tournaments put on for entertainment.

"Just how they are described in Nihon Shoki,” he said.

Tsukinoki no Hiroba is reputed to be where the young Emperor Tenji as crown prince first became acquainted with Nakatomi no Kamatari through a “kemari” ball-kicking game. They connived to stage a coup in 645 that brought about the Taika Reforms to cement the power of the imperial court.

About 300 meters north of the Asukadera Seiho site lie the Ishigami archaeological ruins, which yielded a stone figure, probably a fountain.

The Ishigami site bears traces of a facility that was enclosed by a narrow corridor-like building, which is believed to have been part of a much larger banquet complex.

Author: Yuya Tanaka | Source: The Asahi Shimbun [February 23, 2018]

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Thursday, 22 February 2018

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses


There are no such things as "wild" horses anymore. Research published in Science overturns a long-held assumption that Przewalski's horses, native to the Eurasian steppes, are the last wild horse species on Earth. Instead, phylogenetic analysis shows Przewalski's horses are feral, descended from the earliest-known instance of horse domestication by the Botai people of northern Kazakhstan some 5,500 years ago.

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses
Thought to be the world's last-remaining 'wild' horse, Przewalski's horses actually descend from horses domesticated
by the Botai people about 5,500 years ago [Credit: Lee Boyd]
Further, the new paper finds that modern domesticated horses didn't descend from the Botai horses, an assumption previously held by many scientists.

"This was a big surprise," said co-author Sandra Olsen, curator-in-charge of the archaeology division of the Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum at the University of Kansas, who led archaeological work at known Botai villages. "I was confident soon after we started excavating Botai sites in 1993 that we had found the earliest domesticated horses. We went about trying to prove it, but based on DNA results Botai horses didn't give rise to today's modern domesticated horses -- they gave rise to the Przewalski's horse."

The findings signify there are no longer true "wild" horses left, only feral horses that descend from horses once domesticated by humans, including Przewalski's horses and mustangs that descend from horses brought to North America by the Spanish.

"This means there are no living wild horses on Earth -- that's the sad part," said Olsen. "There are a lot of equine biologists who have been studying Przewalskis, and this will be a big shock to them. They thought they were studying the last wild horses. It's not a real loss of biodiversity -- but in our minds, it is. We thought there was one last wild species, and we're only just now aware that all wild horses went extinct."

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses
Some of the Botai horses were found to carry genetic variants causing white and leopard coat spotting patterns
[Credit: Ludovic Orlando, reworked by Sean Goddard and Alan Outram]
Many of the horse bones and teeth Olsen excavated at two Botai sites in Kazakhstan, called Botai and Krasnyi Yar, were used in the phylogenetic analysis. The international team of researchers behind the paper sequenced the genomes of 20 horses from the Botai and 22 horses from across Eurasia that spanned the last 5,500 years. They compared these ancient horse genomes with already published genomes of 18 ancient and 28 modern horses.

"Phylogenetic reconstruction confirmed that domestic horses do not form a single monophyletic group as expected if descending from Botai," the authors wrote. "Earliest herded horses were the ancestors of feral Przewalski's horses but not of modern domesticates."

Olsen said the findings give rise to a new scientific quest: locating the real origins of today's domesticated horses.

"What's interesting is that we have two different domestication events from slightly different species, or separate sub-species," she said. (The Przewalski's horse's taxonomic position is still debated.) "It's thought that modern-day domesticated horses came from Equus ferus, the extinct European wild horse. The problem is they were thought to have existed until the early 1900s. But, the remains of two individuals in St. Petersburg, Russia, are probably feral, too, or at least probably had some domesticated genes."

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses
Olsen led excavation of Botai sites associated with the earliest-known domestication of horses
[Credit: Sandra Olsen]
Olsen began excavating Botai village sites in Kazakhstan in 1993 after the fall of the Soviet Union made the region accessible to western scientists. Some of the horse remains collected by Olsen were tested as part of the new study showing their ancestry of modern-day Przewalskis.

The Botai's ancestors were nomadic hunters until they became the first-known culture to domesticate horses around 5,500 years ago, using horses for meat, milk, work and likely transportation.

"Once they domesticated horses they became sedentary, with large villages of up to 150 or more houses," said Olsen, who specializes in zooarchaeology, or the study of animal remains from ancient human occupation sites. "They lived primarily on horse meat, and they had no agriculture. We had several lines of evidence that supported domestication. The fact the Botai were sedentary must have meant they had domesticated animals, or plants, which they didn't have. More than 95 percent of the bones from the Botai sites were from horses -- they were in a sense mono-cropping one species with an incredible focus. If they were hunting horses on foot, they would have quickly depleted bands of horses in the vicinity of the villages and would have had to go farther afield to hunt -- it wouldn't have been feasible or supported that large human population."

The KU researcher also cited bone artifacts from Botai sites used to make rawhide thongs that might have been fashioned into bridles, lassos, whips, riding crops and hobbles, as further evidence of horse domestication. Moreover, the Botai village sites include horse corrals.

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses
The Botai buried horses with their snouts pointing southeast toward the rising sun
[Credit: Sandra Olsen]
"We found a corral that contained high levels of nitrogen and sodium from manure and urine," said Olsen. "It was very concentrated within that corral. The final smoking gun was finding residues of mares' milk in the pottery. It's commonplace today in Mongolia and Kazakhstan to milk horses -- when it's fermented it has considerable nutritional value and is very high in vitamins."

Interestingly, Olsen found that after slaughtering horses, the Botai buried some horse skulls and necks in pits with their snouts facing the southeast, toward where the sun rose in the morning in autumn. Mongols and Kazakhs slaughter most of their horses at that time of year because that is when they retain the most amount of nutritious fat in their bodies.

"It's interesting because throughout the Indo-European diaspora there's a strong connection between the sun god and the horse," she said. "It may be that Botai people spoke an early proto-Indo-European language, and they also connected the horse to the sun god. Later in time, and this idea is in the historical record for the Indo-European diaspora, it was believed the sun god was born in the east and rode across the sky in a chariot, pulled by white horses. According to the belief, he would then die in the west and be reborn every day."

The team behind the paper believe Przewalski's horses likely escaped from domestic Botai herds in eastern Kazakhstan or western Mongolia.

Surprising new study redraws family tree of domesticated and 'wild' horses
Excavation at the Botai site, Northern Kazakhstan, 2017
[Credit: Alan Outram/University of Exeter]
"They started developing a semi-wild lifestyle like our mustangs, but they still have a wild appearance," Olsen said. "This is partly why biologists assumed they were genuinely wild animals. They have an upright mane, something associated with wild equids. They also have a dun coat, like the ones you see in the Ice Age cave paintings in France and Spain made when horses were wild. Their size, however, is very similar to what you see at Botai and other sites."

By 1969, Przewalski's horses were declared extinct in the wild, and all living today originated from just 15 individuals captured around 1900. Today, there are approximately 2,000 Przewalski's horses, all descended from those captured horses, and they have been reintroduced on the Eurasian steppes. In a sense, the horses have fared better than the peoples who once domesticated them.

"The Botai people seem to have vanished from their homeland in northern Kazakhstan," said Olsen. "Perhaps they migrated eastward to Mongolia since the later Bronze Age people there shared the practice of ritually burying the horse's head and neck pointing toward the rising sun in the autumn, the time of year they were slaughtered. That's a very specific shared trait."

Source: University of Kansas [February 22, 2018]

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Thursday, 15 February 2018

Ancient tomb containing 'splendid armour' found in Japan


Workers paving a farm road here stumbled on a 1,500-year-old underground tomb containing a large stone coffin, human remains and armor in remarkable condition.

Ancient tomb containing 'splendid armour' found in Japan
A cuirass known as a “tanko” and preserved in excellent condition, and a stone coffin, left, have been unearthed
in Shibushi, Kagoshima Prefecture [Credit: Shibushi City Education Board]
The remains are likely of a local chieftain while the cuirass, a type of breastplate known as “tanko,” is believed to have been a gift from the Yamato imperial court in current Nara Prefecture in appreciation of the leader’s cooperation, the education board of Shibushi city said Jan. 24.

The tunnel-tomb was unearthed during farm road paving work in December.

“It was likely built for a powerful leader in the local region who was directly connected with the Yamato imperial court,” said Tatsuya Hashimoto, a professor of archaeology at the Kagoshima University Museum.

The grave, which is from the Kofun Period (late third to seventh centuries), is one of the largest tunnel-tombs in the Osumi region in eastern Kagoshima Prefecture. It boasts a vertical shaft that is 2.6 meters long, 1.8 meters wide and 1.6 meters deep. The burial chamber is 2.6 meters long, 1.9 meters wide and 90 centimeters high.

This type of construction is unique to the southern Kyushu region. The site has been named the No. 3 Harada Chikashiki Yokoanabo (Harada underground tunnel-tomb).

The skeletal remains are those of a 170-centimeter-tall adult male.

A sword, its scabbard and other items were also found in the pumice stone coffin measuring 2.4 meters. It is 60 cm wide and 50 cm tall.

The tanko is in near-immaculate condition and was standing beside the coffin. The armor measures 35 cm by 40 cm.

More than 20 burial accessories, such as an iron arrowhead, spear and iron ax were discovered.

The tomb features more grave accessories than any other tunnel-tombs in the Osumi region, according to the education board.

Author: Koji Suohara | Source: The Asahi Shimbun [February 15, 2018]

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Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Projecting the impacts of climate change


How might climate change affect the acidification of the world's oceans or air quality in China and India in the coming decades, and what climate policies could be effective in minimizing such impacts? To answer such questions, decision makers routinely rely on science-based projections of physical and economic impacts of climate change on selected regions and economic sectors. But the projections they obtain may not be as reliable or useful as they appear: Today's gold standard for climate impact assessments—model intercomparison projects (MIPs)—fall short in many ways.

Projecting the impacts of climate change
Air pollution in Bangladesh and Northern India [Credit: Jacques Descloitres,
MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC]
MIPs, which use detailed climate and impact models to assess environmental and economic effects of different climate-change scenarios, require international coordination among multiple research groups, and use a rigid modeling structure with a fixed set of climate-change scenarios. This highly dispersed, inflexible modeling approach makes it difficult to produce consistent and timely climate impact assessments under changing economic and environmental policies. In addition, MIPs focus on a single economic sector at a time and do not represent feedbacks among sectors, thus degrading their ability to produce accurate projections of climate impacts and meaningful comparisons of those impacts across multiple sectors.

To overcome these drawbacks, researchers at the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change propose an alternative method that only a handful of other groups are now pursuing: a self-consistent modeling framework to assess climate impacts across multiple regions and sectors. They describe the Joint Program's implementation of this method and provide illustrative examples in a new study published in Nature Communications.

The Joint Program method is essentially a next-generation Integrated Assessment Model (IAM). IAMs typically come in two forms—either as simple climate models coupled with algorithms that translate increases in average global surface temperature into environmental and economic damages known as the social cost of carbon; or as more detailed Earth-system models with continually improving representation of physical impacts, coupled with economic models. The Joint Program IAM integrates a geospatially resolved physical representation of climate impacts into a coupled human and Earth system modeling framework.

Developed over the past 26 years, the MIT Integrated Global System Modeling (IGSM) framework allows researchers to custom-design climate-change scenarios and assess climate impacts under those scenarios. For a given climate change scenario, they can use the framework to analyze the chain of physical changes at the regional and sectoral levels, and then estimate economic impacts at those levels.

"The IGSM framework makes it possible to do multisectoral climate impact assessment within a single modeling framework within a single group," says Erwan Monier, lead author of the study and a principal research scientist at the Joint Program. "It's responsive to changes in environmental policies, internally consistent, and much more flexible than multimodel international exercises."

In the study, Monier and his co-authors applied the IGSM framework to assess climate impacts under different climate-change scenarios—"Paris Forever," a scenario in which Paris Agreement pledges are carried out through 2030, and then maintained at that level through 2100; and "2C," a scenario with a global carbon tax-driven emissions reduction policy designed to cap global warming at 2 degrees Celsius by 2100. The assessments show that "Paris Forever" would lead to a wide range of projected climate impacts around the world, evidenced by different levels of ocean acidification, air quality, water scarcity, and agricultural productivity in different regions. The "2C" scenario, however, would mitigate a substantial portion of these impacts. The researchers also explored additional scenarios developed by Shell International regarding the potential development of low-carbon energy technologies.

"These examples showcase the responsiveness, consistency and multisectoral capability of our approach, which we believe represents a promising direction for the climate impact modeling community," says Sergey Paltsev, a co-author of the study and deputy director of the MIT Joint Program, as well as a senior research scientist at the MIT Energy Initiative and the MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research. "Unlike traditional IAMs and MIPs, the improved coupled human-Earth system models like the IGSM framework enable researchers to design new emissions scenarios in a matter of months rather than years, avoid inconsistencies among different model components and scenarios, and analyze multiple sectors all at once."

Author: Mark Dwortzan | Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology [February 14, 2018]

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Tuesday, 13 February 2018

Fossils of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino restored in SW China


Experts have pieced together the fossil remains of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino at a museum in Chengdu, capital city of southwest China’s Sichuan province.

Fossils of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino restored in SW China
Fossils of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino restored in SW China

Judging from its skeleton, which is 8.8 meters in length, 4.2 meters in height, and 2 meters in width, it is estimated that it weighed more than 20 tons when it was alive.

Fossils of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino restored in SW China
Fossils of a 20 million-year-old giant rhino restored in SW China

The large rhino got stuck in mud before it died, palaeontological experts inferred. In March, the rhino skeleton will be shipped to a museum in Wuhan, central China.

The restoration project took three years and 1.5 million yuan to complete.

Source: People's Daily Online [February 13, 2018]

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