FIGURE 7.6
Lower jaws from the Klasies River Mouth site, South Africa (drawn by Kathryn Cruz-Uribe from casts). Note the contrast in size. Specimen No. 16424 is among the smallest adult human jaws ever recorded (Copyright Kathryn Cruz-Uribe).
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* * *
Archeologists usually assign the African artifact assemblages to the Middle Stone Age or MSA. However, the MSA closely resembles the 07 Body before Behavior.r.qxd 1/29/02 5:06 PM Page 231
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Mousterian Tradition (or Culture) of Europe and western Asia, and the variation of artifacts is greater within the Mousterian and the MSA than it is between them. The difference in naming mainly reflects geographic distance and separate archeological traditions. The MSA and the Mousterian both differed from the preceding Acheulean Tradition primarily in the absence of hand axes and other large bifacial tools, and they replaced the Acheulean at about the same time, between 250,000 and 200,000 years ago (Figure 7.7). Both were in turn replaced after 50,000 years ago by new culture complexes that differed from the MSA and the Mousterian much more sharply than either did from the preceding Acheulean. In Europe, the new complex was the Upper Paleolithic, which we described in the last chapter. Archeologists call the new complex in Africa the Later Stone Age or LSA.
The LSA diverged from the preceding MSA in Africa in exactly the same fundamental features that distinguish the Upper Paleolithic from the Mousterian in Europe. Thus, LSA people tended to manufacture a wider range of easily recognizable stone artifact types; their artifact assemblages varied much more through time and space; they routinely produced standardized (formal) bone artifacts and art; they dug elaborate graves that unequivocally imply a burial ritual; and they were more effective hunter-gatherers whose population densities approximated those of their historic successors in similar environments. Together, LSA and Upper Paleolithic material residues are the oldest to resemble those of historic hunter-gatherers in every detectable respect, and they are thus the oldest from which we can infer unambiguously that the people were behaviorally modern.
LSA and Upper Paleolithic artifact assemblages differed in specifics from the very beginning, and the blades and burins that are 07 Body before Behavior.r.qxd 02/08/2002 3:00 PM Page 232
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millions of
millions of
years ago
years ago
0.0-
0.0-
0.01
0.01
Age
aleolitic
dihedral burin
ivory needle
figurine
endscraper
on a blade
Later Stone
Upper P
beveled-base
&
borer
antler point
bone pendants
0.05
0.05
Age
simple, straight
simple,
double,
sidescraper
Levallois point
convex
straight
sidescraper
sidescraper
Mousterian
&
Middle Stone
Mousterian point
notch
denticulate
backed knife
0.25
0.25
acute-edged
steep-edged
flake
flake
Age
cheuleanA
hand axe
cleaver
pick
flake scraper
discoid
aleolithic
1.7
1.7
acute-edged
steep-edged
flake scraper
chopper
polyhedron
Lower P
flake
flake
Earlier Stone
&
Oldowan
discoid
core scraper
hammerstone
anvil
2.5
2.5
FIGURE 7.7
The principal artifact complexes (“cultures” or “culture-stratigraphic units”) discussed in the text. The individual artifacts are not drawn to scale.
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a hallmark of the Upper Paleolithic are much rarer in the LSA. In their place are small stone scrapers and other equally small stone bits that were intentionally dulled (“backed”) along one edge, probably to facilitate hafting in wooden or bone handles (Figure 7.8). The detailed differences between the LSA and the Upper Paleolithic contrast sharply with the equally detailed similarities between the preceding MSA and Mousterian, and they serve to underscore the significant increase in geographic variability that followed the appearance of the LSA and Upper Paleolithic. If the greater variety of artifact types, the more complex graves, and especially the art and ornamentation of the LSA and Upper Paleolithic signal the dawn of culture in the fully modern sense, then the great increase in artifactual diversity through time and space provides the oldest concrete indication for ethnographic “cultures” or identity-conscious ethnic groups.
Like the latest Mousterian, the latest MSA is difficult to date, because it lies beyond 25,000 years ago, in an interval when even a minute amount of recent, undetectable carbon contamination can make a radiocarbon-dated sample seem 20,000 to 30,000 years younger than it really is. We have already pointed out that other methods like luminescence and ESR that might be used instead commonly require unverifiable site-specific assumptions, and their accuracy is thus often questionable. The problem of dating the latest MSA is exacerbated in southern Africa, where many sites were abandoned between 60,000
and 30,000 years ago, probably because of extreme aridity in the middle of the last glacial period. For the moment, the most informative dates come from eastern Africa, where they indicate that the LSA probably began between 50,000 and 45,000 years ago. The most important site is Enkapune Ya Muto (“Twilight Cave”) in the central Rift Valley of 07 Body before Behavior.r.qxd 1/29/02 5:06 PM Page 234
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borer
“backed” elements (segments)
“thumbnail scrapers”
"fish gorges"
bone
bead
multi-ringed
bone tube
bone pendants
bone spatulate
0
5 cm
bone points
0
2 in
LSA artifacts
“backed” element
denticulate
(segment)
partially bifacial point
MSA artifacts
FIGURE 7.8
Typical MSA and LSA artifacts (top redrawn after J. Deacon, 1984,
British Archaeological
Reports
International Series 213, pp. 198, 244; bottom after T. P. Volman 1981,
The Middle
Stone Age in the Southern Cape
. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Chicago, pp. 229, 232, and 238).
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Kenya excavated by Stanley Ambrose of the University of Illinois.
Enkapune Ya Muto has provided ostrich eggshell beads that are among the oldest personal ornaments so far found, and we emphasized their modern behavioral implications in Chapter 1. Here, we stress that Enkapune Ya Muto and other east African sites place the LSA in Africa firmly before the Upper Paleolithic in Europe. The precise origins of the Upper Paleolithic remain unclear, but a small number of dates suggest it appeared in western Asia 45,000 to 43,000 years ago, perhaps only shortly after the LSA had emerged, that it was present in eastern Europe between 40,000 and 38,000 years ago, and that it reached central and western Europe last, roughly 38,000 to 37,000 years ago (Figure 7.9). This is the expected pattern if the populations that spread the Upper Paleolithic ultimately had their roots in Africa.
Labels and precise dates aside, the basic point is that LSA/Upper Paleolithic people are the first for whom we can infer the fully modern capacity for culture, or perhaps more precisely, the fully modern ability to innovate. It was surely this ability that allowed LSA/Upper Paleolithic people to disperse at the expense of their more primitive contemporaries, beginning between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago.
Upper Paleolithic innovations included solidly built houses, tailored clothing, more efficient fireplaces, and new hunting technology that not only allowed Upper Paleolithic Cro-Magnons to displace their predecessors but also to colonize the harshest, most continental parts of Eurasia where no one had lived before. By 25,000 years ago, Upper Paleolithic people had spread through central Siberia, and by 14,000
years ago, they had reached its northeastern corner. This was in the waning phase of the Last Glaciation, when sea level was still low because of water locked up in the great continental glaciers and when 07 Body before Behavior.r.qxd 1/29/02 5:06 PM Page 236
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years
years
WESTERN
EASTERN
ago
ago
x 1000
AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
ASIA
x 1000
10
Pressent
interglacial
10
20
20
30
Aurignacian &
core/scraper
30
Early Upper
modern
tools &
Paleolithic &
LSA &
H. sapiens
modern
modern
early modern
H. sapiens
40
H. sapiens
40
H. sapiens
Châtelperronian
???
& H.
Last Glaciation
neanderthalensis
50
50
60
60
70
70
Mousterian & H.
flake/chopper
late MSA &
80
neanderthalensis
Mousterian & H.
tools &
80
near-modern
neanderthalensis
evolved
H. sapiens
H. erectus
90
90
100
100
???
Last Interglacial
110
110
MSA &
Mousterian
Mousterian & H.
near-modern
& near-modern
neanderthalensis
120
H. sapiens
H. sapiens
120
130
130
ultimate
enP Glaciation
???
190
190
FIGURE 7.9
Approximate chronological arrangement of various cultures and human physical types in Europe, western Asia, eastern Asia, and Africa from 190,000 years ago to the historical present.
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a broad land bridge linked northeastern Siberia to Alaska. Sometime between 14,000 and 12,000 years ago, Siberian Upper Paleolithic people made the relatively short trek across. By 11,500 years ago, they had spread southwards through the Americas to become the people known to archeologists as the Paleoindians.
* * *
years ago, and LSA layers dating from the Present Interglacial period or Holocene, between 12,000 years ago and the historic present. This is because climatic conditions were similar during these two time intervals and any observed MSA/LSA contrasts are thus likely to reflect a human behavioral difference as opposed to an environmental one. Analyses of animal remains so far suggest four principal contrasts. We previewed these in Chapter 1, and we summarize them only briefly here.
First, Present Interglacial LSA coastal sites (Elands Bay Cave, Die Kelders Cave 1, Blombos Cave, Nelson Bay Cave, Klasies River 07 Body before Behavior.r.qxd 1/29/02 5:06 PM Page 238