EARLY HUMAN BEHAVIOUR IN GLOBAL CONTEXT ONE WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY Series Editor: P.J.Ucko Animals into Art H.Morphy (ed.), vol. 7 Archaeological Approaches to Cultural Identity S.J.Shennan (ed.), vol. 10 Archaeological Heritage Management in the Modern World H.F.Cleere (ed.), vol. 9 Archaeology and Language I: theoretical and methodological orientations R.Blench & M.Spriggs (eds), vol. 27 Archaeology and Language II: archaeological data and linguistic hypotheses R.Blench & M.Spriggs (eds), vol. 28 Archaeology and the Information Age: a global perspective P.Reilly & S.Rahtz (eds), vol. 21 The Archaeology of Africa: food, metals and towns T.Shaw, P.Sinclair, B.Andah & A.Okpoko (eds), vol. 20 Centre and Periphery: comparative studies in archaeology T.C.Champion (ed.), vol. 11 Conflict in the Archaeology of Living Traditions R.Layton (ed.), vol. 8 Domination and Resistance D.Miller, M.J.Rowlands & C.Tilley (eds), vol. 3 The Excluded Past: archaeology in education P.Stone & R.MacKenzie (eds), vol. 17 Foraging and Farming: the evolution of plant exploitation D.R.Harris & G.C.Hillman (eds), vol. 13 From the Baltic to the Black Sea: studies in medieval archaeology D.Austin & L.Alcock (eds), vol. 18 Hunters of the Recent Past L.B.Davis & B.O.K.Reeves (eds), vol. 15 The Meanings of Things: material culture and symbolic expression I.Hodder (ed.), vol. 6 The Origins of Human Behaviour R.A.Foley (ed), vol. 19 The Politics of the Past P.Gathercole & D.Lowenthal (eds), vol. 12 The Presented Past: heritage, museums and education G.Stone & B.L.Molyneaux (eds), vol. 25 Sacred Sites, Sacred Places D.L.Carmichael, J.Hubert, B.Reeves & A.Schanche (eds), vol. 23 iii Signifying Animals: human meaning in the natural world R.G.Willis (ed.), vol. 16 Social Construction of the Past: representation as power G.C.Bond & A.Gilliam (eds), vol. 24 State and Society: the emergence and development of social hierarchy and political centralization J.Gledhill, B.Bender & M.T.Larsen (eds), vol. 4 Time, Process and Structured Transformation in Archaeology S.E.van der Leeuw & J.McGlade (eds), vol. 26 Tropical Archaeobotany: applications and developments J.G.Hather (ed.), vol. 22 The Walking Larder: patterns of domestication, pastoralism, and predation J.Glutton-Brock (ed.), vol. 2 What is an Animal? T.Ingold (ed.), vol. 1 What’s New? A closer look at the process of innovation S.E.van der Leeuw & R.Torrence (eds), vol. 14 Who Needs the Past? Indigenous values and archaeology R.Layton (ed.), vol. 5 EARLY HUMAN BEHAVIOUR IN GLOBAL CONTEXT The Rise and Diversity of the Lower Palaeolithic Record Edited by Michael D.Petraglia and Ravi Korisettar London and New York First published 1998 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 © 1998 selection and editorial matter, Michael D.Petraglia and Ravi Korisettar; individual chapters, the contributors All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Early human behaviour in global context: the rise and diversity of the Lower Palaeolithic record/edited by Michael D.Petraglia and Ravi Korisettar. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Paleolithic period. 2. Human remains (Archaeology) 3. Human evolution. 4. Human behavior. 5. Social evolution. I.Petraglia, M.D. (Michael D.) II. Korisettar, Ravi. GN771.E27 1998 930. 12(cid:0) –dc21 97–42581 ISBN 0-203-20327-5 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-26635-8 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-11763-1 (Print Edition) Contents List of figures viii List of tables xii List of contributors xiv Preface xvi 1 The archaeology of the Lower Palaeolithic: background and 1 overview Ravi KorisettarMichael D.Petraglia 2 Techniques for the chronometry of the Palaeolithic: evidence for 24 global colonization Ashok K.SinghviGünther A.WagnerRavi Korisettar 3 Towards a technological reassessment of East African Plio- 81 Pleistocene lithic assemblages Brian V.LudwigJ.W.K.Harris 4 The lifeways of Homo erectus inferred from archaeology and 104 evolutionary ecology: a perspective from East Africa Susan CachelJ.W.K.Harris 5 Raw material as evidence for human behaviour in the Lower 130 Pleistocene: the Olduvai case Daniel Stiles 6 The earliest South African industries 146 Kathleen Kuman 7 The Lower Palaeolithic settlement of Eurasia, with special 181 reference to Europe Nicolas Rolland 8 Early colonizations and cultural continuities in the Lower 215 Palaeolithic of western Asia Ofer Bar-Yosef vii 9 Grasslands, tool making and the hominid colonization of 273 southern Asia: a reconsideration Robin W.Dennell 10 Quaternary stratigraphy, palaeoclimate and the Lower 298 Palaeolithic of India Ravi KorisettarS.N.Rajaguru 11 The Lower Palaeolithic of India and its bearing on the Asian 339 record Michael D.Petraglia 12 Lower Palaeolithic occupations in Nepal in relation to South Asia 386 Gudrun Corvinus 13 Early Palaeolithic quartz industries in China 407 Jian Leng 14 The Early Palaeolithic of the eastern region of the Old World in 425 comparison to the West J.Desmond Clark 15 Concluding remarks: archaeology’s fifth big question 439 Clive Gamble Index 458 Figures 2.1 Alternative evolutionary scenarios of hominid evolution 25 2.2 The stratigraphic units lithozone, biozone and chronozone are 27 based on palaeontological, lithological and chronometric criteria respectively 2.3 Upper: The conceptual basis of age determination. Lower: A 29 typical time evolution function for the decay of radioactive species 2.4 The carbon exchange reservoir 30 2.5 Carbon cycle in nature 31 2.6 A plot of radiocarbon ages with calendar ages on tree-rings in oak 32 and pine 2.7 (A) Schematic presentation of a typical crystal structure and the 33 lattice defects. (B) The luminescence induction process in the energy band formalism of the crystal structure. (C) Growth of luminescence signal with dose 2.8 Scheme of the thermoluminescence TL and optically stimulated 36 luminescence OSL 2.9 Various geological and archaeological events datable by 36 luminescence 2.10 Schematic presentation of the two magnetic energy levels of a 40 single ‘electronic’ magnet placed in a magnetic field 2.11 Induced fission-tracks in glass shard from Banks Island tephra, 41 Canada 2.12 Range of applicability of fission-track dating for various minerals 43 2.13 Radioactive decay-series of 238U and 235U 46 2.14 A radioactive system in equilibrium has a daughter (D) to parent (P) 46 ratio ((D)/(P)) of unity 2.15 The stratigraphic sequence at the Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania 51 2.16 Scheme of cosmogenic nuclides produced by the interaction of 52 cosmic rays with rocks on the earth’s surface 2.17 Schematic acquisition of remanent magnetism by sediments 53 2.18 Geomagnetic polarity scale of the last 2.8 myr 54 2.19 Selected palaeomagnetic sections with branching events in primate 54 evolution 2.20 Chemical profile through the weathering crust of a chert from 55 Florida ix 2.21 Experimental determination of hydration rates for two chemically 58 different obsidian samples from Kenya 2.22 The calibration curve for cation ratio 59 2.23 Fluorine to phosphate ratios in fossil skeletal samples from Europe 60 plotted against stratigraphic age 2.24 Diagentic reactions commonly used in amino-acid geochronology 62 2.25 Contour plot of amino acid ratios of the fossil mollusc Glycymeris 63 2.26 The TL flint chronology of selected Near Eastern and west 67 European sites 2.27 Possible scenarios of migration of Homo erectus 71 2.28 Summary of the landmarks in the evolution of hominids 71 3.1 Map of East Africa showing the locations of sites included in this 83 study 3.2 Exhausted quartz bipolar cores from BK and Senga 93 3.3 ‘Diminutive’ quartz cores from MNK Main 93 3.4 Heavily reduced single platform cores produced on large basalt 97 flakes from FxJj 18 GSL 3.5 Minimally reduced single platform cores produced on large basalt 97 flakes from FxJj 63 5.1 Stratigraphical relationship between MNK CFS and HWK E 3–4 133 5.2 Location of MNK CFS (88a), HWK E 3–4 (43), FLK N (45a), 134 SHK (91) and Locality 202 5.3 Frequency distribution of flake length at MNK CFS and HWK E 3– 136 4 5.4 Frequency distribution of flake thickness at MNK CFS and HWK E 136 3–4 5.5 Proportions of chert, lava and quartz/quartzite raw materials in the 137 debitage at HWK E 3–4 5.6 The locations of various sources of raw materials found in the 142 artefacts of HWK E 3–4 6.1 The Sterkfontein site, with the grid over Members 4 and 5 154 6.2 Bipolar-flaked cores and chunks from the Sterkfontein Oldowan, 158 Member 5 6.3 Polyhedral cores from the Sterkfontein Oldowan, Member 5 161 6.4 Polyhedral and irregular polyhedral cores in quartz from the 162 Sterkfontein Oldowan, Member 5 6.5 Chopper-cores from the Sterkfontein Oldowan, Member 5 162 6.6 Casual cores in quartz from the Sterkfontein Oldowan, Member 5 164 6.7 Two core-forms from the Sterkfontein Oldowan, Member 5 165 6.8 Diagnostic Acheulian types from Sterkfontein, Member 5 East 167 6.9 Diagnostic Acheulian types from Sterkfontein, Member 5 East 167 6.10 Core forms from the Member 5 West breccia currently being 170 excavated 6.11 A quartzite cleaver from solid breccia in Member 5 West 171
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