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1.
Afr Archaeol Rev ; 39(1): 1-33, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35535307

ABSTRACT

Over the past decade, the increasing wealth of new archaeological data on the Middle Stone Age (MSA) in Senegal and Mali has broadened our understanding of West Africa's contributions to cultural developments. Within the West African sequence, the phase of Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3, ca. 59-24 ka) yielded so far the best known and extensive archaeological information. The site of Toumboura III encompasses an occupation dated by optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) to between 40 ± 3 ka and 30 ± 3 ka. It provides the largest, well-dated, and stratified lithic assemblage in West Africa for the MSA and sheds light on an unprecedented cultural expression for this period, adding to the notable diversity of the late MSA in this region. We conducted a technological analysis of the lithic components following the chaîne opératoire approach. The lithic assemblage features a prevalence of bifacial technology and the exploitation of flakes as blanks for tool production. The craftspeople manufactured distinct types of bifacial tools, including small bifacial points shaped by pressure technique. The new data from Toumboura III demonstrate behavioral patterns that are entirely new in the region. By revealing behavioral innovations and technological particularities, these results on the techno-cultural dynamics during the MIS 3 phase of the MSA enhance our understanding of the complex Pleistocene population history in this part of Africa. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10437-021-09463-5.


Au cours de la dernière décennie, la multiplication des nouvelles données archéologiques sur le Middle Stone Age (MSA) au Sénégal et au Mali a mené à une meilleure introduction de l'Afrique de l'Ouest dans la discussion sur les développements culturels. Dans la séquence ouest-africaine, la phase relative au stade isotopique marin 3 (MIS 3, ~ 59 - 24 ka) est à ce jour la mieux documentée du point de vue archéologique. Le site de Toumboura III représente une occupation humaine datée entre 40 ± 3 ka et 30 ± 3 ka par luminescence stimulée optiquement (OSL). Il a fourni l'assemblage lithique stratifié MSA le plus abondant d'Afrique de l'Ouest et met en lumière une expression culturelle inédite pour cette période, ajoutant ainsi une industrie unique à la diversité considérable déjà reconnue pour le MSA tardif de cette région. Nous avons mené une analyse technologique des artefacts lithiques selon une approche des chaînes opératoires. L'assemblage lithique est caractérisé par une prévalence du façonnage bifacial et par l'exploitation d'éclats de façonnage comme supports d'outils. Les artisans ont confectionné différents types d'outils bifaciaux, dont des petites pointes bifaciales montrant la mise en oeuvre de la technique de façonnage par pression. Les nouvelles données obtenues à Toumboura III montrent des comportements jusque-là inconnus dans la région. Par la mise en évidence d'innovations comportementales et de particularités technologiques, ces résultats sur les dynamiques techno-culturelles au MSA au cours du MIS 3 contribuent à mieux comprendre l'histoire complexe du peuplement dans cette région.

2.
PLoS One ; 16(3): e0247965, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33690652

ABSTRACT

Current archaeological paradigm proposes that the first peopling of the Americas does not exceed the Last Glacial Maximum period. In this context, the acceptance of the anthropogenic character of the earliest stone artefacts generally rests on the presence of projectile points considered no more as typocentric but as typognomonic, since it allows, by itself, to certify the human character of the other associated artefacts. In other words, without this presence, nothing is certain. Archaeological research at Piauí (Brazil) attests to a Pleistocene human presence between 41 and 14 cal kyr BP, without any record of lithic projectile points. Here, we report the discovery and interpretation of an unusual stone artefact in the Vale da Pedra Furada site, in a context dating back to 24 cal kyr BP. The knapping stigmata and macroscopic use-wear traces reveal a conception centred on the configuration of double bevels and the production in the same specimen of at least two successive artefacts with probably different functions. This piece unambiguously presents an anthropic character and reveals a technical novelty during the Pleistocene occupation of South America.


Subject(s)
Archaeology/methods , Fossils/diagnostic imaging , Brazil , History, Ancient , Humans , Inventions/history , Radiometric Dating/methods , Soil/chemistry
3.
J Hum Evol ; 145: 102814, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32673890

ABSTRACT

Northern France and the Near East play and have played a central role in the debate around the Lower Paleolithic (LP) to Middle Paleolithic (MP) boundary. In the early 1990s, the renewed Saalian record for Northern France began to outline a mosaic model of the LP-to-MP transition-mainly based on Tuffreau's works. It implied the coexistence of Upper Acheulean assemblages (numerous bifaces with few standardized retouched flakes), 'Epi-Acheulean' assemblages (rare bifaces and diversified retouched flakes), and Mousterian assemblages (Levalloisian industries) during the Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 8-6 period. Since the 2000s, the discovery of new key sites and enhanced field and laboratory methods are challenging this model. We present first a brief historical summary of previous approaches to the LP to MP boundary in Northern France. A large data set of Saalian archaeological units available from previous works has been updated and expanded to include additional sites. This allows us to demonstrate that the current Saalian record from Northern France is both rich and sparse as it is heterogeneously biased through time and space and that these biases limit the accuracy of any attempt to model the LP-to-MP transition. Nevertheless, we describe the differences between pre-MIS 9 and MIS 9 and MIS 8-6 records for lithic industries and discuss whether the current periodization is still relevant considering new data on technological, behavioral, and cultural changes. The comparison between Northern France and Near Eastern records allows regional cultural patterns to be distinguished from global trends in lithic trajectories of change and determination of how they slotted together. Our review of the available data from these two distant regions confirms that the LP-to-MP transition is probably one of the major cultural shifts in human evolution.


Subject(s)
Animal Migration , Cultural Evolution , Geologic Sediments/analysis , Human Migration , Tool Use Behavior , Animals , Archaeology , Fossils , France , Humans , Middle East , Neanderthals
4.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 13091, 2019 09 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31511611

ABSTRACT

The dispersal of hominin groups with an Acheulian technology and associated bifacial tools into northern latitudes is central to the debate over the timing of the oldest human occupation of Europe. New evidence resulting from the rediscovery and the dating of the historic site of Moulin Quignon demonstrates that the first Acheulian occupation north of 50°N occurred around 670-650 ka ago. The new archaeological assemblage was discovered in a sequence of fluvial sands and gravels overlying the chalk bedrock at a relative height of 40 m above the present-day maximal incision of the Somme River and dated by ESR on quartz to early MIS 16. More than 260 flint artefacts were recovered, including large flakes, cores and five bifaces. This discovery pushes back the age of the oldest Acheulian occupation of north-western Europe by more than 100 ka and bridges the gap between the archaeological records of northern France and England. It also challenges hominin dispersal models in Europe showing that hominins using bifacial technology, such as Homo heidelbergensis, were probably able to overcome cold climate conditions as early as 670-650 ka ago and reasserts the importance of the Somme valley, where Prehistory was born at the end of the 19th century.

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