Daily Dispatch

Homebodies led to Stone Age technology change

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A STUDY has found that “staying longer at home” was key to a Stone Age technology change about 60 000 years ago.

Research by scientists at the University of the Witwatersr­and suggests that this was about the time when Stone Age humans began to settle down‚ staying in one area for longer periods.

Wits said the research also provided a potential answer to a mystery: why older‚ Howiesons Poort complex technologi­cal tradition in South Africa‚ disappeare­d at that time.

The research paper by Dr Paloma de la Pea and Professor Lyn Wadley from the Evolutiona­ry Studies Institute and the School of Geography‚ Archaeolog­y and Environmen­tal Studies at Wits in Johannesbu­rg‚ was published in PlosOne‚ titled: Technologi­cal variabilit­y at Sibudu Cave: The end of Howiesons Poort and reduced mobility strategies after 62 000 years ago.

De la Pea and Wadley explored the changes observed between an industry known as the Howiesons Poort (dated about 65 000 to 62 000 years ago at Sibudu) and the one that followed it at about 58 000 years ago.

Sibudu‚ a rock shelter near Tongaat in KwaZulu-Natal‚ has a long and diverse archaeolog­ical sequence.

The Howiesons Poort at Sibudu contains many crescent-shaped stone tools fashioned from long‚ thin blades made of dolerite‚ hornfels and‚ to a lesser extent‚ quartz.

These “segments” were hafted to shafts or handles at a variety of angles using compound adhesives that sometimes included red ochre (an iron oxide).

A variety of hunting techniques was used‚ perhaps including the first use of snares for the capture of small creatures‚ according to the study.

“The animal remains brought to Sibudu reflect this diversity, for there are bones from large plains game like zebra‚ tiny blue duiker‚ and even pigeons and small carnivores.”

Soft ochre pieces were collected in the Howiesons Poort‚ “perhaps at a considerab­le distance from Sibudu”. Clayey ochre is useful for applying as paint.

The Wits study said “the beautiful Howiesons Poort industry with its long‚ thin blades is replaced at 58 000 years ago by a simple technology that could be rapidly produced”.

Coarse rocks like quartzite and sandstone became popular. These could be collected close to Sibudu.

Post-Howiesons Poort tools were part of an unstandard­ized toolkit with irregularl­y shaped flakes. Tiny scaled pieces were also produced using a bipolar technique (in the simplest terms this involves smashing a small piece of rock with a hammerston­e).

The study said there were many grindstone­s in Sibudu 58 000 years ago. These were used to grind ochre and/or bone.

Ochre use also changed. Silty ochre found close to Sibudu was popular at 58 000 years ago and rather than suggesting tasks different from earlier ones‚ researcher­s suggest people may have wanted to collect raw materials close to their camp.”

Scientists do not know whether group size was larger at 58 000 years ago than before‚ or whether small groups occupied the site for a long time.

“What we can say is that the people using the simple post-Howiesons Poort technology were ‘home-bodies’ who preferred to collect the raw materials they needed from close to their camp.” — DDC

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