Is early silcrete heat treatment a new behavioural proxy in the Middle Stone Age?

被引:17
作者
Stolarczyk, Regine E. [1 ,2 ]
Schmidt, Patrick [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Eberhard Karls Univ Tubingen, Dept Prehist & Quaternary Ecol, Tubingen, Baden Wurttembe, Germany
[2] Univ Tubingen, Res Ctr Role Culture Early Expans Humans, Heidelberg Acad Sci & Humanities, Baden Wurttemberg, Germany
[3] Eberhard Karls Univ Tubingen, Dept Geosci Appl Mineral, Tubingen, Baden Wurttembe, Germany
关键词
DIEPKLOOF ROCK SHELTER; SOUTH-AFRICA; HOWIESONS-POORT; WESTERN CAPE; BLOMBOS CAVE; SIBUDU CAVE; COMPLEX COGNITION; HOMO-SAPIENS; TOOLS; OCHRE;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0204705
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The South African Middle Stone Age (MSA) has in recent years become increasingly important for our understanding of the emergence of 'modern human behaviours'. Several key innovations appeared in this context for the first time, significantly pre-dating their re-invention in the European Upper Palaeolithic. One of these innovations was heat treatment of stone to improve its quality for the production of stone tools. Heat treatment may even be the oldest well-documented technique used to intentionally alter the properties of materials in general. It is commonly thought of as requiring the skilled use of fire, a high degree of planning depth and complex cognitive abilities. However, to work on these fundamental concepts we need to analyse the techniques and procedures used to heat-treat and we need to understand what they imply. In this paper, we present a direct and expedient comparison between the technical complexities of four alternative heat treatment procedures by coding the behaviours required for their set-up in so-called cognigrams, a relatively new method for understanding complexity based on the problem-solution distance. Our results show that although the techniques significantly differ in complexity, the techniques used in the MSA fall within the range of complexities known from other MSA techniques. Heat treatment in above-ground fires, as it was practised during this period in South Africa, was even one of the most complex techniques at the time of its invention. Early heat treatment can therefore be considered an important behavioural proxy that may shed light on the behaviour and socioeconomic structure of past groups. The implications of this are highlighted by the ongoing debate about 'modernity', 'behavioural flexibility' and 'complex cognition' of early anatomically modern humans in Africa.
引用
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页数:21
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