scholarly journals Geoarchaeological investigation of occupation deposits in Blombos Cave in South Africa indicate changes in site use and settlement dynamics in the southern Cape during MIS 5b-4

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-54
Author(s):  
Magnus M. Haaland ◽  
Christopher E. Miller ◽  
Ole F. Unhammer ◽  
Jerome P. Reynard ◽  
Karen L. van Niekerk ◽  
...  

Abstract The archaeological assemblage recovered from the Middle Stone Age (MSA) levels in Blombos Cave, South Africa, is central to our understanding of the development of early modern humans. Here, we demonstrate that the cultural and technological innovations inferred from the Blombos Cave MSA record also correlate with significant shifts in site use and occupational intensity. Through a comprehensive geoarchaeological investigation of three MSA occupation phases, we identified distinct diachronic trends in the frequency of visits and the modes of occupation. During the earliest phases (ca. 88–82 ka), humans inhabited the cave for more extended periods, but cave visits were not frequent. During the later phases (ca. 77–72 ka), the cave was more regularly visited but for shorter periods each time. We argue that these changes in local occupational intensity, which also coincide with shifts in vegetation, sea levels, and subsistence, can best be explained by broader changes in hunter-gatherer mobility strategies and occupation patterns. Fundamental changes in regional settlement dynamics during Marine Oxygen Isotope Stages 5b-4 would have significantly affected the nature and frequency of social interaction within and between prehistoric populations living in the southern Cape, a scenario that ultimately may explain some of the social and technological advances that occurred there during this time frame.

2019 ◽  
Vol 115 (9/10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kokeli P. Ryano ◽  
Karen L. van Niekerk ◽  
Sarah Wurz ◽  
Christopher S. Henshilwood

Klipdrift Cave in the southern Cape, South Africa, provides new insights into shellfish harvesting during the Later Stone Age (14–9 ka) period associated with the Oakhurst techno-complex. Two shellfish species dominate: Turbo sarmaticus and Dinoplax gigas. An abrupt shift in the relative frequencies of these species occurs in the middle of the sequence with T. sarmaticus almost completely replacing D. gigas. The shift in dominant species is likely due to environmental change caused by fluctuating sea levels rather than change in sea surface temperatures. The shellfish assemblage shows that local coastal habitats at Klipdrift Cave were somewhat different from those of contemporaneous sites in the southern Cape. Although the shellfish specimens are smaller at Klipdrift Cave than those from Middle Stone Age localities such as Blombos Cave, there is no robust indication that larger human populations at Klipdrift Cave during the Oakhurst period might have caused this change in size. Environmental or ecological factors could have restricted shellfish growth rates as some experimental works have suggested, but this possibility also remains to be further explored.


2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaw Badenhorst ◽  
Karen L. van Niekerk ◽  
Christopher S. Henshilwood

1997 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 890-895 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Henshilwood ◽  
Judith Sealy

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia Larbey ◽  
Karen van Niekerk ◽  
Christopher Henshilwood ◽  
Martin Jones

Abstract We present the results of archaeobotanical research conducted into the plant diet of early modern humans who intermittently occupied Blombos Cave on the southern Cape coast of South Africa during the Middle Stone Age (MSA). Botanical samples were taken from two combustion events in the MSA sequence dated to 85 and 82 kya (kya = thousands of years ago). Analysis of these samples shows charred starchy plants had undergone processing sequences prior to cooking. The plant cells show evidence of having been pounded whilst still fresh and some of these fragments indicate pounded starchy plant food was mixed with pounded seeds prior to cooking. We infer that these samples represent the earliest known example of food processing and mixing in a ‘recipe’ as part of early human foodways. We consider these findings and their role in human evolution in the context of human behavioural modernity.


2009 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S. Henshilwood ◽  
Francesco d'Errico ◽  
Ian Watts

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudolf Botha

At issue in this article is the soundness of archaeological inferences which proceed stepwise from data about the material culture of Middle Stone Age humans, via assumptions about their symbolic behaviour, to the conclusion that they had modern language. Taking as paradigmatic the inference that the humans who inhabited Blombos Cave in South Africa some 75,000 years ago had fully syntactical language, the article argues that the inferential step from symbolic behaviour to modern language lacks the required warrant. This step, it is shown, is not underpinned by an adequate bridge theory of the putative links between symbolic behaviour and modern language. The bridge theories invoked to date to shore up the Blombos inference are flawed, for instance, in that they incorporate untenable assumptions about language, including an incorrect view of the expressive power of relatively simple linguistic means.


2001 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 421-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.S. Henshilwood ◽  
J.C. Sealy ◽  
R. Yates ◽  
K. Cruz-Uribe ◽  
P. Goldberg ◽  
...  

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