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Strandloping as a Resource-Gathering Strategy in the Cape,South African Holocene Later Stone Age: The Verloren Vlei Record
Authors:John Parkington  John W Fisher Jr  Cedric Poggenpoel  Katharine Kyriacou
Institution:1. Archaeology Department, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africajohn.parkington@uct.ac.za;3. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA;4. Archaeology Department, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Elands Bay and adjacent coastline near the mouth of the Verloren vlei on the South African Atlantic coast offered Later Stone Age foragers a variety of marine, estuarine, and terrestrial food resources. We suggest that strandloping (beachwalking or beachcombing) by latest Holocene foragers as a regular practice constituted an important component in their repertoire of subsistence activities. Washed-up mussels, seals, birds, whales, and other recently dead animals would have been available to such strandlopers. We distinguish strandloping as a subsistence practice from the procurement of living prey, including shellfish, mammals, birds, and other animals. The Holocene archaeological record of the Elands Bay area suggests changes through time in resource use, and these changes appear to be recognizable in patterns of shellfish gathering. During the latest part of the Holocene, between about 1,500 and 300 years ago, subsistence practices display a distinctive character that perhaps conforms more strongly than previously to what we conceive of as strandloping.
Keywords:hunter-gatherers  shellfish  South Africa  strandloping (beachcombing)  Western Cape
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