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Magnetostratigraphic and archaeological records at the Early Pleistocene site complex of Madigou (Nihewan Basin): Implications for human adaptations in North China

Authors :
Chinese Academy of Sciences
National Natural Science Foundation of China
John Templeton Foundation
Torre Sainz, Ignacio de la [0000-0002-1805-634X]
Ma, Dongdong [0000-0001-7674-4733]
Pei, Shuwen
Deng, Chenlong
Torre Sainz, Ignacio de la
Jia, Zhenxiu
Ma, Dongdong
Li, Xiaoli
Wang, Xiaomin
Chinese Academy of Sciences
National Natural Science Foundation of China
John Templeton Foundation
Torre Sainz, Ignacio de la [0000-0002-1805-634X]
Ma, Dongdong [0000-0001-7674-4733]
Pei, Shuwen
Deng, Chenlong
Torre Sainz, Ignacio de la
Jia, Zhenxiu
Ma, Dongdong
Li, Xiaoli
Wang, Xiaomin
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Nihewan Basin in North China contains the densest concentration of early Pleistocene Paleolithic sites outside Africa. This paper introduces a new archaeological site complex at Madigou (MDG) that was systematically excavated from 2011 to 2014 in the northeastern part of the Nihewan Basin. The site contains fossils and well-preserved stone artefacts in fluvio-lacustrine sediments. Our magnetostratigraphic results situate the MDG sedimentary sequence in the early Brunhes normal chron and the late Matuyama reverse chron, including the Jaramillo normal subchron. The MDG artifact layers are positioned within the pre-Jaramillo Matuyama chron, with an estimated age of ca. 1.2 Ma, close to the onset of Mid-Pleistocene climate transition. The MDG core and flake technology includes bipolar flaking of siliceous dolomite cobbles, and freehand flaking of chert and brecciated chert block fragments. Mammalian fauna and pollen compositions indicate that the MDG hominins lived in an open habitat varying from lightly-wooded grassland to an ecosystem dominated by sparse steppe near the shore of the Nihewan paleolake. Our combined results in the fields of archaeology, paleontology, palynology and magnetochronology suggest that innovations in technological behavior may correlate with adaptations to high environmental variability during the start of Mid-Pleistocene climate transition.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442725485
Document Type :
Electronic Resource