scholarly journals Taphonomic Analysis of the Faunal Assemblage Associated with the Hominins (Australopithecus sediba) from the Early Pleistocene Cave Deposits of Malapa, South Africa

PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. e0126904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurore Val ◽  
Paul H. G. M. Dirks ◽  
Lucinda R. Backwell ◽  
Francesco d’Errico ◽  
Lee R. Berger
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Armstrong ◽  
Stephanie Edwards‐Baker ◽  
Paul Penzo‐Kajewski ◽  
Andy I. R. Herries

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (8) ◽  
pp. e0256090
Author(s):  
Paola Villa ◽  
Giovanni Boschian ◽  
Luca Pollarolo ◽  
Daniela Saccà ◽  
Fabrizio Marra ◽  
...  

The use of bone as raw material for implements is documented since the Early Pleistocene. Throughout the Early and Middle Pleistocene bone tool shaping was done by percussion flaking, the same technique used for knapping stone artifacts, although bone shaping was rare compared to stone tool flaking. Until recently the generally accepted idea was that early bone technology was essentially immediate and expedient, based on single-stage operations, using available bone fragments of large to medium size animals. Only Upper Paleolithic bone tools would involve several stages of manufacture with clear evidence of primary flaking or breaking of bone to produce the kind of fragments required for different kinds of tools. Our technological and taphonomic analysis of the bone assemblage of Castel di Guido, a Middle Pleistocene site in Italy, now dated by 40Ar/39Ar to about 400 ka, shows that this general idea is inexact. In spite of the fact that the number of bone bifaces at the site had been largely overestimated in previous publications, the number of verified, human-made bone tools is 98. This is the highest number of flaked bone tools made by pre-modern hominids published so far. Moreover the Castel di Guido bone assemblage is characterized by systematic production of standardized blanks (elephant diaphysis fragments) and clear diversity of tool types. Bone smoothers and intermediate pieces prove that some features of Aurignacian technology have roots that go beyond the late Mousterian, back to the Middle Pleistocene. Clearly the Castel di Guido hominids had done the first step in the process of increasing complexity of bone technology. We discuss the reasons why this innovation was not developed. The analysis of the lithic industry is done for comparison with the bone industry.


PaleoAmerica ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-298
Author(s):  
Óscar R. Solís-Torres ◽  
Guillermo Acosta-Ochoa ◽  
Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales ◽  
Fabio Flores Granados

2020 ◽  
Vol 560 ◽  
pp. 109989
Author(s):  
Lucinda Backwell ◽  
Jean-Bernard Huchet ◽  
Tea Jashashvili ◽  
Paul H.G.M. Dirks ◽  
Lee R. Berger

2016 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Travis Rayne Pickering ◽  
Jason L. Heaton ◽  
Morris B. Sutton ◽  
Ron J. Clarke ◽  
Kathleen Kuman ◽  
...  

Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4237 (2) ◽  
pp. 393 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALBERTO COLLARETA ◽  
CURTIS W. MAREAN ◽  
ANTONIETA JERARDINO ◽  
MARK BOSSELAERS

The late Middle Pleistocene cave site of Pinnacle Point 13B (PP13B, South Africa) has provided the archaeologically oldest evidences yet known of human consumption of marine resources. Among the marine invertebrates recognised at PP13B, an isolated whale barnacle compartment was tentatively determined as Coronula diadema and regarded as indirect evidence of human consumption of a baleen whale (likely Megaptera novaeangliae). In this paper we redetermine this coronulid specimen as Cetopirus complanatus. This record significantly extends the fossil history of C. complanatus back by about 150 ky, thus partially bridging the occurrence of Cetopirus fragilis in the early Pleistocene to the latest Quaternary record of C. complanatus. Since C. complanatus is currently known as a highly specific phoront of right whales (Eubalaena spp.), we propose that the late Middle Pleistocene human groups that inhabited PP13B fed on a stranded southern right whale. Therefore, the whale barnacle from PP13B suggests the persistence of a southern right whale population off South Africa during the predominantly glacial MIS 6, thus evoking the continuity of cetacean migrations and antitropical distribution during that global cold phase. Interestingly, the most ancient evidence of humans feeding on a whale involves Eubalaena, historically the most exploited cetacean genus, and currently still seriously threatened with extinction due to human impact. 


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