Drought old news for Western Cape
ADAPTING to drought is really old news in the Western Cape‚ scientists have found.
Humans who lived in the region between 59 500 and 65 800 years ago developed cultural innovations to survive what a team from France‚ Norway and South Africa called a prolonged period of pronounced aridification.
In contrast with this year’s innovation that involves flushing the toilet with water caught in a bucket while showering‚ the people from the so-called Howiesons Poort period were involved in more of a life-and-death struggle.
“The most distinct of the many cultural innovations in the HP culture were the invention of the bow and arrow‚ different methods of heating raw materials [stone] ‚ engraving ostrich eggshells and relatively intense hunting and gathering practices‚” Christopher Henshilwood‚ of the Evolutionary Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand, said.
These innovations allowed the people of the Howiesons Poort era – named after an archaeological site near Grahamstown – to “significantly enlarge the range of environments they occupied”‚ compared with the people of the Still Bay tradition who preceded them.
Writing in the Journal of Human Evolution‚ Henshilwood said that despite the drought‚ Howiesons Poort populations exploited territories and ecosystems that were unknown to Still Bay people.
“It seems from the little evidence that we have that the population of homo sapiens in southern Africa was considerably larger during the Howiesons Poort period.” – TimesLIVE