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Technological variation in the earliest Oldowan from Gona, Afar, Ethiopia

Authors :
Stout, Dietrich
Semaw, Sileshi
Rogers, Michael J.
Cauche, Dominique
Departement of Anthropology
Emory University [Atlanta, GA]
The Stone Age Institute
USA
Center for Research inyo the Anthropological Foundations of Technology
Indiana University [Bloomington]
Indiana University System-Indiana University System
Southern Connecticut State University
Laboratoire Départemental de Préhistoire du Lazaret (LDPL)
Département des Alpes-Maritimes
Lecervoisier, Bertrand
Source :
Journal of Human Evolution, Journal of Human Evolution, Elsevier, 2010, pp.474-491
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2010.

Abstract

International audience; Inter-site technological variation in the archaeological record is one of the richest potential sources of information about Plio-Pleistocene hominid behavior and evolution. However, appropriate methods for describing and comparing Oldowan assemblages have yet to be agreed upon, and interpretation of the early record remains highly controversial. Particularly salient is disagreement over whether the Oldowan is a single technological phenomenon or is more accurately divided into multiple regional and/or chronological traditions, perhaps including a less developed Pre-Oldowan phase in the late Pliocene. Some of this disagreement reflects theoretical and methodological differences between research traditions and some is more directly evidential. Here we present a framework for describing and interpreting Oldowan variation and apply it to three Pliocene assemblages (EG-10, EG-12, and OGS-7) from Gona, all dated to c. 2.6 million years (Ma). Results indicate proficient knapping and a full range of Oldowan reduction strategies in these earliest known occurrences, consistent with the idea of an Oldowan "technological stasis" from 2.6-1.6Ma. Patterns of variation in raw material selection and predominant reduction strategy at each site clearly indicate the importance of cultural transmission in the Oldowan, but confounding ecological and economic variation continue to render interpretation in terms of multiple tool making traditions or species inappropriate. We propose that cultural transmission and ecological adaptation should be recognized as complementary, rather than mutually exclusive, mechanisms in future attempts to explain Oldowan technological variation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00472484 and 10958606
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Human Evolution, Journal of Human Evolution, Elsevier, 2010, pp.474-491
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..3b384e0187f9a8f83877fde9e26c6eb3