Plant taphonomy, flora exploitation and palaeoenvironments at the Middle Stone Age site of Mwulu's Cave (Limpopo, South Africa): an archaeobotanical and mineralogical approach

被引:8
作者
Esteban, Irene [1 ,2 ]
Fitchett, Jennifer M. [3 ]
de la Pena, Paloma [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Witwatersrand, Evolutionary Studies Inst, Johannesburg, South Africa
[2] Nelson Mandela Univ, African Ctr Coastal Palaeosci, Eastern Cape Port Elizab, South Africa
[3] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa
关键词
Cave deposits; Palimpsests; Preservation; Phytoliths; Pollen; FTIR; ORANGE-FREE-STATE; LATE QUATERNARY; WINTER-RAINFALL; ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD; PHYTOLITH ASSEMBLAGES; VEGETATION HISTORY; POLLEN ANALYSIS; SEDIMENTS; HOLOCENE; REGION;
D O I
10.1007/s12520-020-01181-4
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The interior regions of South Africa have had less attention devoted to archaeological research than coastal regions, and palaeoenvironmental studies are also more limited. As such, little is known about the interaction between human behaviours and past environments in these semi-arid regions. Here, we present an archaeobotanical and mineralogical study from the Middle Stone Age site of Mwulu's Cave, Limpopo Province. Our study shows the importance of using taphonomical approaches prior to interpreting archaeobotanical assemblages, while provides with novel information on the plants used by ancient inhabitants of Mwulu's. The grass phytolith composition is of environmental significance, where a shift from C(4)Panicoideae to C(3)grasses is observed in the last occupation event. This tentatively suggests a shift in rainfall regime, from summer rainfall conditions to an increase in winter rain, during Marine Isotope Stage 5b in the Polokwane region, or a decrease in rainfall seasonality. Although we are unable to chronostratigraphically associate this change in the plant composition, our study adds evidence in support of previous propositions for an expansion of the winter rainfall zone into the interior regions of South Africa.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 115 条
[1]  
Albert R.M., 2000, THESIS
[2]  
Albert RM, 2001, PHYTOLITHS: APPLICATIONS IN EARTH SCIENCES AND HUMAN HISTORY, P251
[3]   The Exploitation of Plant Resources by Early Homo sapiens: The Phytolith Record from Pinnacle Point 13B Cave, South Africa [J].
Albert, Rosa M. ;
Marean, Curtis W. .
GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2012, 27 (04) :363-384
[4]   Morphological characteristics of phytoliths from representative conifers in China [J].
An, Xiao-Hong .
PALAEOWORLD, 2016, 25 (01) :116-127
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2000, The Weather and Climate of Southern Africa
[6]   Multiproxy record of late Quaternary climate change and Middle Stone Age human occupation at Wonderkrater, South Africa [J].
Backwell, Lucinda R. ;
McCarthy, Terence S. ;
Wadley, Lyn ;
Henderson, Zoe ;
Steininger, Christine M. ;
deKlerk, Bonita ;
Barre, Magali ;
Lamothe, Michel ;
Chase, Brian M. ;
Woodborne, Stephan ;
Susino, George J. ;
Bamford, Marion K. ;
Sievers, Christine ;
Brink, James S. ;
Rossouw, Lloyd ;
Pollarolo, Luca ;
Trower, Gary ;
Scott, Louis ;
d'Errico, Francesco .
QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2014, 99 :42-59
[7]  
Balme Basil E., 1995, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, V87, P81, DOI 10.1016/0034-6667(95)93235-X
[8]   Macrobotanical Remains from Wonderwerk Cave (Excavation 1), Oldowan to Late Pleistocene (2 Ma to 14 ka BP), South Africa [J].
Bamford, Marion K. .
AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2015, 32 (04) :813-838
[9]   Plio-Pleistocene macroplant fossil remains and phytoliths from Lowermost Bed II in the eastern palaeolake margin of Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania [J].
Bamford, MK ;
Albert, RM ;
Cabanes, D .
QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2006, 148 :95-112
[10]   Sediments exposed to high temperatures: reconstructing pyrotechnological processes in Late Bronze and Iron Age Strata at Tel Dor (Israel) [J].
Berna, Francesco ;
Behar, Adi ;
Shahack-Gross, Ruth ;
Berg, John ;
Boaretto, Elisabetta ;
Gilboa, Ayelet ;
Sharon, Ilan ;
Shalev, Sariel ;
Shilstein, Sana ;
Yahalom-Mack, Naama ;
Zorn, Jeffrey R. ;
Weiner, Steve .
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2007, 34 (03) :358-373