Climate frameworks for the Middle Stone Age and Later Stone Age in Northwest Africa

被引:2
作者
Boisard, Solene [1 ]
Wren, Colin D. [2 ]
Timbrell, Lucy [3 ,4 ]
Burke, Ariane [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Montreal, Dept Anthropol, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[2] Univ Colorado Colorado Springs, Dept Anthropol, Colorado Springs, CO USA
[3] Univ Liverpool, Dept Archaeol Class & Egyptol, Liverpool, England
[4] Max Planck Inst Geoanthropol, Human Palaeosyst Grp, Jena, Germany
基金
加拿大魁北克医学研究基金会;
关键词
Late Pleistocene; Northwest Africa; Ecological refugia; Archaeological sites; Pastclim; LAST GLACIAL MAXIMUM; LATE PLEISTOCENE; SEA-LEVEL; POPULATION-DYNAMICS; LITHIC ASSEMBLAGES; GEBEL AKHDAR; VARIABILITY; MOROCCO; CONTEXT; SCALE;
D O I
10.1016/j.quaint.2024.109593
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
This paper examines climate conditions in Northwest Africa for Marine Isotope Stage 4, 3, and 2 (71,000-11,000 years ago) and their impact on the distribution of potential suitable areas on a regional scale. The analysis uses climate simulations to model: 1) the geographical extent and variability of macro-refugia based on ethnographic data; and 2) the frequency of suitable areas based on climate ranges obtained at dated archaeological occupations. The results include the production of maps of MSA and LSA site distribution, and annual precipitation and temperature values for each dated human occupation. The macro-refugia models confirm the persistence and low variability of ecological macro-refugia along the Mediterranean coast but reveal limitations in Central Sahara. Macro-refugia models aligned closely with climate-archaeological models, except for Marine Isotope Stage 4. Despite the general spatio-temporal limitations of climate simulations, our study offers valuable data to be integrated with local environmental proxies. These climate frameworks and insights can contribute to the exploration of past human demography, connectivity and human-environment interactions across different scales of analysis.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 121 条
[1]   Evaluating the impact of climate change and millennial variability on the last Neanderthal populations in Europe (Marine Isotope Stage 3) [J].
Albouy, Benjamin ;
Paquin, Simon ;
Riel-Salvatore, Julien ;
Kageyama, Masa ;
Vrac, Mathieu ;
Burke, Ariane .
QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2024, 338
[2]   Late Pleistocene human population bottlenecks, volcanic winter, and differentiation of modern humans [J].
Ambrose, SH .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION, 1998, 34 (06) :623-651
[3]   Multiple phases of north African humidity recorded in lacustrine sediments from the fazzan basin, Libyan sahara [J].
Armitage, S. J. ;
Drake, N. A. ;
Stokes, S. ;
El-Hawat, A. ;
Salem, Mt ;
White, K. ;
Turner, P. ;
McLaren, S. J. .
QUATERNARY GEOCHRONOLOGY, 2007, 2 (1-4) :181-186
[4]   Identifying refugia from climate change [J].
Ashcroft, Michael B. .
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2010, 37 (08) :1407-1413
[5]   The other MSA: non-Aterian lithic assemblages in Algeria, characteristics and attribution [J].
Bahra, Nadia .
AZANIA-ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN AFRICA, 2024, 59 (01) :22-52
[6]  
Barich B., 2010, Libya Antiqua, V5, P237
[7]  
Barker G, 2010, LIBYAN STUD, V41, P63, DOI DOI 10.1017/S0263718900000273
[8]   Reconsidering the MSA to LSA transition at Taforalt Cave (Morocco) in the light of new multi-proxy dating evidence [J].
Barton, R. N. E. ;
Bouzouggar, A. ;
Collcutt, S. N. ;
Carrion Marco, Y. ;
Clark-Balzan, L. ;
Debenham, N. C. ;
Morales, J. .
QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2016, 413 :36-49
[9]   Origins of the Iberomaurusian in NW Africa: New AMS radiocarbon dating of the Middle and Later Stone Age deposits at Taforalt Cave, Morocco [J].
Barton, R. N. E. ;
Bouzouggar, A. ;
Hogue, J. T. ;
Lee, S. ;
Collcutt, S. N. ;
Ditchfield, P. .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION, 2013, 65 (03) :266-281
[10]  
Barton R.N.E., 2007, Rethinking the Human Revolution: New Behavioural and Biological Perspectives on the Origins and Dispersal of Modern Humans, Research Monographs of the Macdonald Institute, P177