scholarly journals A Chronological Perspective on the Acheulian and Its Transition to the Middle Stone Age in Southern Africa: The Question of the Fauresmith

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andy I. R. Herries

An understanding of the age of the Acheulian and the transition to the Middle Stone Age in southern Africa has been hampered by a lack of reliable dates for key sequences in the region. A number of researchers have hypothesised that the Acheulian first occurred simultaneously in southern and eastern Africa at around 1.7-1.6 Ma. A chronological evaluation of the southern African sites suggests that there is currently little firm evidence for the Acheulian occurring before 1.4 Ma in southern Africa. Many researchers have also suggested the occurrence of a transitional industry, the Fauresmith, covering the transition from the Early to Middle Stone Age, but again, the Fauresmith has been poorly defined, documented, and dated. Despite the occurrence of large cutting tools in these Fauresmith assemblages, they appear to include all the technological components characteristic of the MSA. New data from stratified Fauresmith bearing sites in southern Africa suggest this transitional industry maybe as old as 511–435 ka and should represent the beginning of the MSA as a broad entity rather than the terminal phase of the Acheulian. The MSA in this form is a technology associated with archaic H. sapiens and early modern humans in Africa with a trend of greater complexity through time.

Antiquity ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 85 (330) ◽  
pp. 1433-1443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marlize Lombard ◽  
Isabelle Parsons

The authors deliver a decisive blow to the idea of unidirectional behavioural and cognitive evolution in this tightly argued account of why the bow and arrow was invented and then possibly laid aside by Middle Stone Age communities in southern Africa. Finding that all are modern humans (Homo sapiens), they paint a picture of diverse strategies for survival and development from 75 000 years ago onwards. It is one in which material inventions can come and go, human societies negotiating their own paths through a rugged mental landscape of opportunity.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carina M. Schlebusch ◽  
Helena Malmström ◽  
Torsten Günther ◽  
Per Sjödin ◽  
Alexandra Coutinho ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSouthern Africa is consistently placed as one of the potential regions for the evolution of Homo sapiens. To examine the region’s human prehistory prior to the arrival of migrants from East and West Africa or Eurasia in the last 1,700 years, we generated and analyzed genome sequence data from seven ancient individuals from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Three Stone Age hunter-gatherers date to ~2,000 years ago, and we show that they were related to current-day southern San groups such as the Karretjie People. Four Iron Age farmers (300–500 years old) have genetic signatures similar to present day Bantu-speakers. The genome sequence (13x coverage) of a juvenile boy from Ballito Bay, who lived ~2,000 years ago, demonstrates that southern African Stone Age hunter-gatherers were not impacted by recent admixture; however, we estimate that all modern-day Khoekhoe and San groups have been influenced by 9–22% genetic admixture from East African/Eurasian pastoralist groups arriving >1,000 years ago, including the Ju|‘hoansi San, previously thought to have very low levels of admixture. Using traditional and new approaches, we estimate the population divergence time between the Ballito Bay boy and other groups to beyond 260,000 years ago. These estimates dramatically increases the deepest divergence amongst modern humans, coincide with the onset of the Middle Stone Age in sub-Saharan Africa, and coincide with anatomical developments of archaic humans into modern humans as represented in the local fossil record. Cumulatively, cross-disciplinary records increasingly point to southern Africa as a potential (not necessarily exclusive) ‘hot spot’ for the evolution of our species.


European prehistory - Nicholas J. Conard (ed.). When Neanderthals and Modern Humans Met (Tübingen Publications in Prehistory). vi+502 pages, 133 illustrations, 34 tables. 2006. Tübingen: Kerns; 3-935751-03-6 hardback €49.95. - Laura Niven. The Palaeolithic Occupation of Vogelherd Cave: Implications for the Subsistence Behavior of Late Neanderthals and early Modern Humans (Tübingen Publications in Prehistory). vi+314 pages, 84 illustrations, 61 tables. 2006. Tübingen: Kerns; 3-935751-04-4 hardback €39.95. - Per Karsten & Bjorn Nilsson (ed.). In the Wake of a Woman: Stone Age Pioneering of North-eastern Scania, Sweden, 10 000-5000 BC, The Årup Settlements (Riksantikvarieämbetet Skrifter 63). 200 pages, 138 b&w & colour illustrations. n.d. Lund: Riksantikvarieämbetet; 978-91-7209-412-3 hardback. - Antoine Chancerel, Cyril Marcigny & Emmanuel Ghesquière (ed). Le plateau de Mondeville (Calvados) du néolithique a l'âge du bronze (Documents d'archéologie française 99). 205 pages, 133 illustrations, 35 tables. 2006. Paris: Maison des sciences de l'homme; 978-2-7351-1117-6 paperback €36. - Felix Müller & Geneviève Lüscher. Die Kelten in der Schweiz. 200 pages, 272 b&w & colour illustrations, 1 table. 2004. Stuttgart: Theiss; 978-3-8062-1759-9 hardback €39.90 & CHF69. - Gustavo García Jiménez. Entre Iberos y Celtas: Las Espadas de Tipo La Tène del Morreste de la Península Ibérica (Anejos de Gladius 10). 328 pages, 138 illustrations, tables. 2006. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas/Polifemo; 978-84-86547-97-4 paperback €40.

Antiquity ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (312) ◽  
pp. 501-502
Author(s):  
Madeleine Hummler

Antiquity ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (324) ◽  
pp. 299-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liubov V. Golovanova ◽  
Vladimir B. Doronichev ◽  
Naomi E. Cleghorn

New work from the Caucasus is revolutionising the timing and character of the shift from Neanderthals to early Modern humans in Eurasia. Here the authors reveal a powerful signal of that change from excavations at Mezmaiskaya: the abrupt appearance of a well-formed bone industry and ornaments.


1978 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janette Deacon

The dating of the Stone Age sequence in southern Africa has been considerably revised over the last decade, and one of the anomalies which has resulted is that the Middle Stone Age, now dated to beyond 30,000 B.P., does not immediately precede the Later Stone Agesensu stricto. The excavation and analysis of occupation horizons dating between the most recent Middle Stone Age assemblages and the Holocene is therefore of particular interest. Nelson Bay Cave, situated on the southern coast of South Africa, contains deposits which partly fill the “gap” between the Middle and Later Stone Ages, and the occupation horizons dating between about 18,000 and 5000 years ago are described in this paper. Changes in the habitat in the vicinity of the site caused by sea-level and vegetation changes coincident with the amelioration of temperatures at the end of the Pleistocene are clearly marked in the faunal remains at the site. Largely correlated with the faunal changes (which includes the introduction of marine resources to the cave at about 12,000 B.P.) are changes in the stone artifact assemblages. Three industries are recognized in the sequence: the Robberg, characterized by microbladelets produced from bladelet cores and a few small scrapers and backed tools; the Albany, characterized by large scrapers and an absence of backed tools; and the Wilton, characterized by a variety of Formal Tools including relatively large numbers of small scrapers and backed tools. These changes in artifact-manufacturing traditions are interpreted as signaling adjustments to changing environmental conditions. An explanation for these adjustments is not sought in a simple cause-and-effect relationship between the environment and the cultural response; artifact changes are seen instead as the result of a twofold process, with the environment acting as an external stimulus to change, and the direction of the artifact change governed by the selection of a range of possibilities offered by the technology of the Later Stone Agesensu latothat was widespread in subequatorial Africa during the last 20,000 years.


Science ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 325 (5942) ◽  
pp. 859-862 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. S. Brown ◽  
C. W. Marean ◽  
A. I. R. Herries ◽  
Z. Jacobs ◽  
C. Tribolo ◽  
...  

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