TY - JOUR
T1 - Late Acheulean occupations at Montagu Cave and the pattern of Middle Pleistocene behavioral change in Western Cape, southern Africa
AU - Archer, Will
AU - Presnyakova, Darya
AU - Aldeias, Vera
AU - Colarossi, Debra
AU - Hutten, Louisa
AU - Lauer, Tobias
AU - Porraz, Guillaume
AU - Rossouw, Lloyd
AU - Shaw, Matthew
N1 - Funding Information:
One still highly influential view, which has been variably articulated, proposes that gradual cumulative changes in material culture through the African later Middle Pleistocene eventually resulted in uniquely modern human behavior (McBrearty and Brooks, 2000). Within this framework, the emergence of the MSA was coupled with concurrent loss of technologies assumed to be relatively more archaic such as Acheulean LCTs. This model draws substantially on data from the eastern African Rift system and is supported by environmental archives documenting increasing variability in resource availability associated with the emergence of the MSA and, perhaps more contentiously, by the proposed deep antiquity of complex technologies and ochre use in coastal South Africa (Marean et al., 2007; McBrearty and Stringer, 2007; Brooks et al., 2018). If one were to fit a model to this gradualist trajectory of cultural change, it would likely look close to logarithmic, initiating with a linear onset of innovations in the later Middle Pleistocene, but with a variable rate of change in accumulation that tapers off in the later Pleistocene. This tapering off is attributed to the suite of behaviors traditionally recognized to be modern becoming more comprehensive and archaeologically visible by ∼50 ka (Henshilwood and Marean, 2003; Villa et al., 2012), although the pursuit of contemporary hunter–gather culture in the archaeological past remains contentious and regionally variable (d'Errico et al., 2012; Pargeter et al., 2016; Bader et al., 2022). In this gradualist framework, one might expect to see evidence for transitional industries with mosaics of residual Acheulean and emerging MSA technologies, such as the Fauresmith or some of the other transitional industries proposed for equatorial geographic settings (Tryon and McBrearty, 2002, 2006).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/11/30
Y1 - 2023/11/30
N2 - Patterns of so-called modern human behavior are increasingly well documented in an abundance of Middle Stone Age archaeological sites across southern Africa. Contextualized archives directly preceding the southern African Middle Stone Age, however, remain scarce. Current understanding of the terminal Acheulean in southern Africa derives from a small number of localities that are predominantly in the central and northern interior. Many of these localities are surface and deflated contexts, others were excavated prior to the availability of modern field documentation techniques, and yet other relevant assemblages contain low numbers of characteristic artifacts relative to volume of excavated deposit. The site of Montagu Cave, situated in the diverse ecosystem of the Cape Floral Region, South Africa, contains the rare combination of archaeologically rich, laminated and deeply stratified Acheulean layers followed by a younger Middle Stone Age occupation. Yet little is known about the site owing largely to a lack of contextual information associated with the early excavations. Here we present renewed excavation of Levels 21–22 at Montagu Cave, located in the basal Acheulean sequence, including new data on site formation and ecological context, geochronology, and technological variability. We document intensive occupation of the cave by Acheulean tool-producing hominins, likely at the onset of interglacial conditions in MIS 7. New excavations at Montagu Cave suggest that, while Middle Stone Age technologies were practiced by 300 ka in several other regions of Africa, the classic Acheulean persisted later in the Fynbos Biome of the southwestern Cape. We discuss the implications of this regionalized persistence for the biogeography of African later Middle Pleistocene hominin populations, for the ecological drivers of their technological systems, and for the pattern and pace of behavioral change just prior to the proliferation of the southern African later Middle Stone Age.
AB - Patterns of so-called modern human behavior are increasingly well documented in an abundance of Middle Stone Age archaeological sites across southern Africa. Contextualized archives directly preceding the southern African Middle Stone Age, however, remain scarce. Current understanding of the terminal Acheulean in southern Africa derives from a small number of localities that are predominantly in the central and northern interior. Many of these localities are surface and deflated contexts, others were excavated prior to the availability of modern field documentation techniques, and yet other relevant assemblages contain low numbers of characteristic artifacts relative to volume of excavated deposit. The site of Montagu Cave, situated in the diverse ecosystem of the Cape Floral Region, South Africa, contains the rare combination of archaeologically rich, laminated and deeply stratified Acheulean layers followed by a younger Middle Stone Age occupation. Yet little is known about the site owing largely to a lack of contextual information associated with the early excavations. Here we present renewed excavation of Levels 21–22 at Montagu Cave, located in the basal Acheulean sequence, including new data on site formation and ecological context, geochronology, and technological variability. We document intensive occupation of the cave by Acheulean tool-producing hominins, likely at the onset of interglacial conditions in MIS 7. New excavations at Montagu Cave suggest that, while Middle Stone Age technologies were practiced by 300 ka in several other regions of Africa, the classic Acheulean persisted later in the Fynbos Biome of the southwestern Cape. We discuss the implications of this regionalized persistence for the biogeography of African later Middle Pleistocene hominin populations, for the ecological drivers of their technological systems, and for the pattern and pace of behavioral change just prior to the proliferation of the southern African later Middle Stone Age.
KW - Early Stone Age
KW - Hominin behavior
KW - Middle Stone Age
KW - Technological change
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85172667932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhevol.2023.103435
DO - 10.1016/j.jhevol.2023.103435
M3 - Article
C2 - 37774470
SN - 0047-2484
VL - 184
JO - Journal of Human Evolution
JF - Journal of Human Evolution
M1 - 103435
ER -