4.8 Article

Early evidence of San material culture represented by organic artifacts from Border Cave, South Africa

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1204213109

Keywords

bone artifacts; chemical analysis; modernity; wooden artifacts

Funding

  1. European Research Council [TRACSYMBOLS 249587]
  2. South Africa/France Scientific Cooperation Agreement
  3. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  4. University Research Council, University of the Witwatersrand
  5. Ernest Oppenheimer Memorial Trust
  6. Institut Francais d'Afrique du Sud
  7. Project Origines II, Aquitaine Region
  8. National Science Foundation [BCS 0613319]
  9. School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand
  10. NERC [NRCF010002] Funding Source: UKRI
  11. Natural Environment Research Council [NRCF010002] Funding Source: researchfish

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Recent archaeological discoveries have revealed that pigment use, beads, engravings, and sophisticated stone and bone tools were already present in southern Africa 75,000 y ago. Many of these artifacts disappeared by 60,000 y ago, suggesting that modern behavior appeared in the past and was subsequently lost before becoming firmly established. Most archaeologists think that San hunter-gatherer cultural adaptation emerged 20,000 y ago. However, reanalysis of organic artifacts from Border Cave, South Africa, shows that the Early Later Stone Age inhabitants of this cave used notched bones for notational purposes, wooden digging sticks, bone awls, and bone points similar to those used by San as arrowheads. A point is decorated with a spiral groove filled with red ochre, which closely parallels similar marks that San make to identify their arrowheads when hunting. A mixture of beeswax, Euphorbia resin, and possibly egg, wrapped in vegetal fibers, dated to similar to 40,000 BP, may have been used for hafting. Ornaments include marine shell beads and ostrich eggshell beads, directly dated to similar to 42,000 BP. A digging stick, dated to similar to 39,000 BP, is made of Flueggea virosa. A wooden poison applicator, dated to similar to 24,000 BP, retains residues with ricinoleic acid, derived from poisonous castor beans. Reappraisal of radiocarbon age estimates through Bayesian modeling, and the identification of key elements of San material culture at Border Cave, places the emergence of modern hunter-gatherer adaptation, as we know it, to similar to 44,000 y ago.

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