Early Maritime Desert Dwellers in Namaqualand,South Africa: A Holocene Perspective on Pleistocene Peopling |
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Authors: | Genevieve Dewar Brian A. Stewart |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;2. Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africagenevieve.dewar@utoronto.ca;4. Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;5. Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTSouth Africa's northern Namaqualand coastal desert is the southern extension of the Namib. Today, this region is semi-desert with patchy subsistence resources and scarce, unpredictable rainfall. Yet this ancient desert landscape possesses residues of human activity stretching back into the Middle Pleistocene, evidenced by heavily weathered surface finds, including handaxes and Victoria West cores. Such old finds in so harsh an environment raise important questions: how do human movements into this area relate to local palaeoenvironmental changes, and how has this relationship changed through time? While no dated Middle Pleistocene sites presently exist to reconstruct the earliest hominin dispersals, several late Pleistocene sites now have chronostratigraphic sequences that can be brought to bear on these questions. This article presents chronological and subsistence-settlement data for one such site, Spitzkloof A Rockshelter in northern Namaqualand's rugged Richtersveld. Humans are shown to have visited the site very sporadically between ~50,000 and 17,000 cal BP. Unlike most of the subcontinent, the most intensive occupations occur during early Marine Isotope Stage 2, when multiple proxies suggest enhanced humidity associated with intensified winter rainfall. We examine these data using the region's better-developed Holocene archaeological record to create predictions about the earliest coastal desert dwellers. |
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Keywords: | coastal desert Later Stone Age Middle Stone Age MIS 2 MIS 3 Namaqualand South Africa |
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