Mashable 2024年12月10日
Scientists reveal why Bering Bridge let humans cross — but not all animals
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一项新研究揭示了白令陆桥在末次冰期阶段的真实面貌。利用声纳和岩芯技术,科学家们发现这片连接北美和亚洲的陆地并非过去认为的干燥草原,而是以沼泽、洪泛平原和蜿蜒的溪流为主的湿地环境。这种潮湿的环境可能对某些物种的迁徙造成了阻碍,但也可能为水生生物提供了通道。这项研究有助于我们更好地理解人类和其他物种是如何迁徙到美洲的。

🗺️ 白令陆桥在末次冰期并非干燥草原,而是以沼泽、洪泛平原和蜿蜒溪流为主的湿地环境,这与之前认为的西伯利亚干草原生态系统截然不同。

🚢 研究团队乘坐R/V Sikuliaq科考船,利用声纳技术识别了白令陆桥的低洼区域,并在36个不同的水下地点采集了沉积物岩芯,发现了淡水湖泊沉积物、淡水蚤卵壳、苔藓叶等证据,证实了其湿地环境。

🦏 潮湿的环境可能阻碍了某些大型冰期哺乳动物的迁徙,例如披毛犀未能到达北美,而美洲驼和短面熊也未能到达亚洲,更新世野牛的DNA分析也显示东西白令地区存在一定程度的遗传隔离。

🦣 虽然环境潮湿,但一些标志性的冰期食草动物仍然找到了穿越的途径,例如猛犸象,它们可能沿着更高、更干燥的区域活动。

💧 这项研究使用了先进的海洋调查技术,揭示了白令陆桥在末次冰期的真实环境,对理解人类和其他物种迁徙到美洲的历史具有重要意义,并将引发更多关于这一关键北极地区的科学研究和讨论。

A pivotal history of Earth lies submerged beneath the Bering Sea.

Today this frigid strait separates North America and Asia, but geologists suspect when the oceans were dramatically lower a land bridge tied the two continents together — allowing humans and other species to cross into the Americas. Scientists thought the Bering Land Bridge mirrored the dry grassy plains found in the nearby Siberian steppe ecosystem. But new research, employing a vessel's sonar and coring technology, shows the environment was likely dominated by bogs, floodplains, and snaking streams.

The soggy bridge might have allowed some to pass, but not others.

"The watery, wet landscape could have been a barrier for some species, or a pathway for species that actually travel by water," Jenna Hill, a U.S. Geological Survey geologist who coauthored the research, said in a statement. "That’s how this fits into the bigger picture."

The research, entitled "The Bering Land Bridge During the Last Glacial Stage: Great Grazing or Buggy Bogs?" will be presented at the American Geophysical Union's 2024 meeting.

Before Earth's glaciers dramatically receded and filled the oceans at the end of the last ice age some 11,000 years ago, the bridge was an expansive migration corridor, spreading 1,000 miles from north to south. Humans began crossing over by around 16,500 years ago, which many scientists argue was the earliest (but not the only) migration to the Americas.

Agile, though at times drenched, humans could have skirted ponds and bogs as they slogged westward towards modern-day Alaska. But some larger ice mammals — who never made it across — might have been deterred by the wet region. For example, woolly rhinos never made it to North America, while American camels (who went extinct some 12,000 years ago) and short-faced bears (who inhabited great swathes of North America including Alaska and the Yukon) never made it to Asia.

Even though the bridge was open for business, conditions there may have thwarted much movement. Pleistocene bison made two big migrations into North America. "But DNA analysis shows a fair amount of genetic separation of Pleistocene bison from east and west Beringia suggesting there was only limited movement of bison back west over the land bridge," Pamela Groves, a research scientist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, previously wrote.

Yet some iconic ice age herbivores still found ways to cross.

"It may have been marshy, but we are still seeing evidence of mammoths," Sarah Fowell, a paleogeologist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, said in a statement. "Even if it was mostly floodplains and ponds, the grazers were around, just uphill following higher, drier areas."

A map of Beringia, a vast area periodically exposed during Earth's glaciations. Lighter browns depict once exposed land areas. Credit: NPS
An artist's depiction of a woolly rhino during the last ice age. Credit: aleks1949 / Getty Images

The Bering Land Bridge's boggy environs were revealed by a research cruise aboard the R/V Sikuliaq, an over 260-foot oceanographic vessel operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The researchers used sonar (which bounces signals off the seafloor) to identify low-lying regions of the former land bridge, and then captured sediment cores from 36 different submerged sites, hundreds of feet underwater.

They found sediments from freshwater lakes, abundant egg cases from freshwater fleas, moss leaves, and beyond. The evidence clearly showed a swampy world.

"We were looking for several large lakes," explained Fowell. "What we actually found was evidence of lots of small lakes and river channels."

The new, hard-earned findings will almost certainly stoke more scientific study and debate about this influential Arctic region, and how it helped mold the diverse world we see today.

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白令陆桥 冰期 古环境 物种迁徙 海洋科考
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