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L’OREAL Australia For Women in Science Fellowships – Zenobia Jacobs

L’OREAL Australia For Women in Science Fellowships – Zenobia Jacobs

The L’OREAL Australia For Women in Science Fellowships were recently announced. Read on to find out about one of the winners, Zenobia Jacobs from the University of Wollongong.


  • 08 October 2009

Zenobia Jacobs

University of Wollongong

zenobia jacobsZenobia Jacobs wants to know where we came from, and how we got here. When did our distant ancestors leave Africa and spread across the world? Why? And when was Australia first settled?

These are difficult and controversial questions. But Zenobia has a deep understanding of time and how to measure it. She has developed a way of accurately dating when individual grains of sand were buried with human artefacts. And that technique is transforming our understanding of human evolution.

As a child growing up in the shadow of the Kruger National Park, Zenobia Jacobs was surrounded by archaeological artefacts ‘lying around’. At university she ‘fell in love’ with archaeology and became an expert in chronology.

She uses a dating technique known as optically stimulated luminescence (OSL). It relies on subtle changes in sand grains due to the decay of tiny amounts of radioactive elements present in all natural deposits. The energy of some of these reactions is stored and only released when light strikes the grain. If the sand is buried then the energy is trapped and can be released in Zenobia’s laboratory- revealing how long the sand, and the human artefacts it was associated with, were buried.

Zenobia has fine tuned OSL, turning it into a robust tool that she used to reveal the appearance and disappearance of communities at caves along the southern coastline of South Africa.

She found a community that had been living relatively sophisticated lives-harvesting shellfish and using ochre pigments for decoration-more than 160,000 years ago, about 120,000 years earlier than previously thought.

These studies also helped win Zenobia and her colleagues a US$2.5 million National Science Foundation grant in 2006 to develop a detailed archaeological, climate and environmental record for South Africa from 400,000 to 30,000 years ago.

Now her work has brought her to the University of Wollongong to work with Prof Bert Roberts, one of the team who discovered the Flores ‘hobbit’.

“Bert has done more than any other to develop single-grain OSL dating. It’s simply the best lab in the world for my work. I could not ask for more anywhere else.”

And settling in Australia has also allowed her to expand her work. Already she and Bert have used OSL to suggest that the giant marsupials of Tasmania became extinct within a few thousand years of human migration into the area via a land bridge about 43,000 years ago.

And now, with her $20,000 L’Oréal Australia For Women in Science Fellowship, she wants to track the movement of the Aboriginal people into and throughout Australia.

“It’s of incredible relevance to the whole ‘Out of Africa’ theory. When did our ancestors leave Africa? Why? Which routes did they chose and how quickly did they disperse?”

Background

Qualifications

 

2004                     PhD (Science), University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK

1999                     Bachelor of Arts, Honours (Archaeology), University of Stellenbosch, South Africa


Career highlights, awards, fellowships and grants

2009                    Senior Research Fellow, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong

2008                    Australian Research Council grant: The future of palaeolimate and archaeological research in Australia: next generation instrumentation for chronology and environmental reconstruction

2008                    Vice Chancellor’s Emerging Researcher Award, University of Wollongong

2007                    Australian Research Council grant: A stable-isotope mass spectrometer for novel determinations of past temperatures

2006                   Australian Research Council grant: Out of Africa and into Australia: Robust chronologies for turning points in modern human evolution and dispersal

2006                   National Science Foundation (USA) HOMINID Grant: Palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental context of the origins of modern humans in South Africa: Constructing a detailed record from 400,000 – 30,000 years ago

2006 -2008          Research Fellow, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong

2003 -2005          Scientist, Environmentek, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria, South Africa

2001-2003           British Council Overseas Research Student Scholarship for PhD studies in the UK

 

Research highlights

  • 25 journal articles and reviews including 15 as first author, and two book chapters
  • More than 30 presentations at Australian and international conferences and institutions including six invited conference presentations
  • Part of the team whose discoveries at Blombos Cave, South Africa, have forced a reassessment of when and where Homo sapiens first developed modern behaviour
  • In 2007, she co-authored a publication in Nature, reporting evidence that modern humans living 165,000 years ago along the southern Cape coast of South Africa had a far more complex lifestyle than seen anywhere else in the world at that time

For further detail on the L’OREAL Australia For Women in Science Fellowships, please visit http://www.scienceinpublic.com/blog/category/loreal

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