Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T22:08:53.955Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

3 - The earliest archaeological traces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Glynn Ll. Isaac
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
Get access

Summary

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE EVIDENCE

This chapter is concerned with archaeological studies of developing technology and culture from the earliest traces to the end of the Middle Pleistocene – that is to say, over a time-span from about two million years ago to about one hundred thousand years ago. The African record of this vast time-span illustrates better than any other the dictum that history, through prehistory, is joined to natural history (Childe 1941, p. 4). In interpreting the evidence, we have continually to bear in mind the fact that we are dealing not with a mere extension of history or ethnography, but with human behaviour patterns in the making. We need to think in terms of changing adaptive systems that involved simultaneous growth in the capacity for culture and in culture itself.

In chapter 2, Howell treats aspects of the anatomical and physiological transformation which brought human cultural capability to its modern level of complexity. The changes involve amongst other things modification of the hind limbs for bipedal locomotion, shortening of the arms and modification of the hands for increased dexterity. Most important of all has been the reorganization and enlargement of the brain and it is to this that we can attribute those qualities of humanity that set our species apart from all other mammals: skill, ‘insight’, cunning, aesthetic sense and above, all, linguistic communication and social co-ordination.

We know that in the last few million years of human evolution these abilities arose or were greatly expanded, but yet fossil human bones provide scant documentation of the pathway by which the transformation came about.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alimen, H. (1957). Prehistory of Africa. Translated by Broderick, A. H.. London and New York.
Arambourg, C. and Balout, L. (1955). L'ancien lac de Tihodaine et ses gisements préhistoriques. In Actes du II Congrès panafricain de Préhistoire (Algiers, 1952), 281–92. Paris.Google Scholar
Ardrey, R. (1961). African genesis. London.
Ardrey, R. (1976). The hunting hypothesis. New York.
Arkell, A. J. (1949). The Old Stone Age in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, Sudan Antiquities Service Occasional Papers I, Khartoum.Google Scholar
Aronson, J. A., Schmitt, T. J., Walter, R. C., Taieb, M., Tiercelin, J.-J., Johanson, D. C., Naeser, C. W. and Nairn, A. E. M. (1977). New geo-chronologic and palaeomagnetic data for the hominid-bearing Hadar Formation of Ethiopia. Nature, Lond.. 267, 323–7.Google Scholar
Bakker, E. M. Zinderen (ed.) (1966–80). Palaeoecology of Africa, 12 vols. Cape Town.
Balout, L. (1955). Préhistoire de l'Afrique du Nord: essai de chronologie. Paris.
Balout, L., Biherson, P. and Tixier, J. (1967). L'Acheuléen de Ternifine (Algérie). Gisement de l'Atlanthrope. Anthropologie, Paris 71, 217–37.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1966a). Mission de recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine. Note préliminaire. Bull. Soc. préhist. fr. 63, 651–66.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1966b). Première mission de recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine. Cahiers de la Maboké 4, 158–75.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1967a). Premier aperçu du Paléolithique Inférieur en République Cen-trafricaine. Anthropologie, Paris 71, 435–66.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1967b). Deuxième mission de recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine, jan-fév 1967. Cahiers de la Mahoké 5, 77–92.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1968a). Troisième mission de recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine, fév-mars 1968. Cahiers de la Maboké 6, 27–38.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1968b). Troisième mission de recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine. Museé National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire de Préhistoire, Paris.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1968c). Recherches préhistoriques en République Centrafricaine, 1966–67. W. Afr. archaeol. Newsl. 9, 6–12.Google Scholar
Bayle, des Hermens R. (1971). Premiers éléments de préhistoire en République Centrafricaine. In Actes VIe Congrès Panafricain de Préhistoire et d'Etude du Quaternaire (Dakar, 1967), 124–29. Chambéry.Google Scholar
Biberson, P. (1961a). Le cadre paléogéographique de la préhistoire du Maroc atlantique. Serv. Antiquités Maroc. 16.Google Scholar
Biberson, P. (1961b). Le Paléolithique Inférieur du Maroc atlantique. Publ. Antiquités Maroc. 17, Rabat.Google Scholar
Biberson, P. (1967). Some aspects of the lower Palaeolithic of northwest Africa. In Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. (eds.), Background to evolution in Africa, 447–76. Chicago.Google Scholar
Binford, L. R. (1972). Contemporary model building: paradigms and the current state of Palaeolithic research. In Clarke, D. L. (ed.), Models in archaeology, 109–66. London.Google Scholar
Bishop, W. W. (1959). Kafu stratigraphy and Kafu artifacts. S. Afr. J. Sci. 55, 117–21.Google Scholar
Bishop, W. W. (1971). The late Cenozoic history of East Africa in relation to hominoid evolution. In Turekian, K. K. (ed.), Late Cenozoic Glacial Ages, 493–528. New Haven.Google Scholar
Bishop, W. W. (1972). Stratigraphic succession ‘versus’ calibration in East Africa. In Bishop, W. W. and Miller, J. A. (eds.), Calibration of hominoid evolution, 219–46. Edinburgh and Toronto.Google Scholar
Bishop, W. W. (ed.) (1978). Geological background to fossil man. Edinburgh and Toronto.
Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. (eds.) (1967). Background to evolution in Africa. Chicago.
Bishop, W. W. and Miller, J. A. (eds.). (1972). The calibration of hominoid evolution. Edinburgh and Toronto.
Bishop, W. W., Pickford, M. and Hill, A. (1975). New evidence regarding Quaternary geology, archaeology and hominids of Chesowanja, Kenya. Nature, Lond. 258, 204–8.Google Scholar
Bordes, F. (1968). The Old Stone Age. New York and Toronto.
Brain, C. K. (1958). The Transvaal ape-man-bearing cave deposits. Transv. Mus. Mem. II.
Brain, C. K. (1967). Hottentot food remains and their bearing on the interpretation of fossil bone assemblages. Sci. Pap. Namib Desert Res. Station 32, 1–11.Google Scholar
Brain, C. K. (1970). New finds at Swartkrans Australopithecine site. Nature, Lond. 225, 112–19.Google Scholar
Brain, C. K. (1976). Some principles in the interpretation of bone accumulations associ-ated with man. In Isaac, G. Ll. and McCown, E. R. (eds.), Human origins. Louis Leakey and the East African evidence, 97–116. Menlo Park.Google Scholar
Breuil, H., Cabu, F. and Lowe, C. Riet (1944). Le Paléolithique au Congo belge d'après les recherches du docteur Cabu. Trans. R. Soc. S. Afr. 30 (2), 143–74.Google Scholar
Broeker, W. S. and Bender, M. L. (1972). Age determinations on marine strandlines. In Bishop, W. W. and Miller, J. A. (eds.), Calibration of hominoid evolution, 19–36. Edinburgh and Toronto.Google Scholar
Brothwell, D. and Higgs, E. (1963). Science in archaeology. Bristol.
Burkitt, M. C. (1928). South Africa's past in stone and paint. Cambridge.
Burkitt, M. C. (1949). The Old Stone Age, 2nd ed. Cambridge.
Butzer, K. W. (1971). Environment and archaeology, 2nd ed. Chicago.
Butzer, K. W. (1974a). Geo-archaeological interpretation of two Acheulian calc-pan sites: Doornlaagte and Rooidam (Kimberley, South Africa). J. archaeol. Sci. I, 1–25.Google Scholar
Butzer, K. W. (1974b). Paleoecology of South African Australopithecines: Taung revisited. Curr. Anthrop. 15 (4), 367–82, 413–16.Google Scholar
Butzer, K. W. (1976). The Mursi, Nkalabong and Kibish Formations, Lower Omo Basin, Ethiopia. In Coppens, Y. et al., (eds.), Earliest man and environments in the Lake Rudolph basin, 12–23. Chicago.Google Scholar
Butzer, K. W. and Hansen, G. L. (1968). Desert and river in Nubia. Madison.
Butzer, K. W. and Isaac, G. Ll. (eds.) (1975). After the australopithecines. The Hague.
Butzer, K. W., Helgren, D. M., Fock, G. J., and Stuckenrath, R. (1973). Alluvial terraces of the lower Vaal River, South Africa: a reappraisal and reinvestigation. J. Geol. 81, 341–62.Google Scholar
Cabu, F. (1952). Some aspects of the Stone Age in the Belgian Congo. In Proceedings of the Pan-African Congress on Prehistory, 1947, 195–201. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cahen, D. (1968). Chronologie interne de la station acheuléenne de la Kamoa, Katanga, Africa-Tervuren 14, 103–10.Google Scholar
Campbell, B. G. (ed.) (1976). Humankind evolving. Boston and Toronto.
Camps, G. (1974). Les civilisations préhistoriques d' Afrique du Nord et du Sahara. Paris.
Caton-Thompson, G. (1952). Kharga Oasis in prehistory. London.
Chavaillon, J. (1964). Etude stratigraphique des formations Quaternaires du Sahara Nord Occidental. ,Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifque, Paris.
Chavaillon, J. (1976). Evidence for the technical practices of early Pleistocene hominids. In Coppens, Y. et al. (eds.), Earliest man and environments in the Lake Rudolf basin, 565–73. Chicago.Google Scholar
Chavaillon, J. and Chavaillon, N. (1976). Le Paléolithique ancien en Ethiopie: caractères techniques de l'Oldowayen de Gomboré-I à Melka Kuntouré en Ethiopie. In IXe Congrès de l'Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques (Nice, 1976), Colloque V, 43–69. Nice.Google Scholar
Childe, V. G. (1941). Man makes himself. London.
Clark, J. D. (1950). The Stone Age cultures of Northern Rhodesia. S. Afr. Archaeol. Soc., Cape Town.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1959a). The prehistory of southern Africa. Harmondsworth.
Clark, J. D. (1959b). Further excavations at Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia. Jl R. anthrop. Inst. 89, 201–32.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1963). Prehistoric cultures of northeast Angola and their significance in tropical Africa 2 vols. Publcōes cult. Co. Diam. Angola 62.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1964). The influence of environment in inducing culture change at the Kalambo Falls prehistoric site. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 19, 93–101.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1966). The distribution of prehistoric culture in Angola. Publcões cult. Co. Diam. Angola 73.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1967). Atlas of African prehistory. Chicago.
Clark, J. D. (1968). Furtherpalaeo-anthropological studies in Northern Luanda. Publcōes cult. Co. Diam. Angola 78.
Clark, J. D. (1969). The Kalambo Falls prehistoric site, vol. I. Cambridge.
Clark, J. D. (1970). The prehistory of Africa. London and New York.
Clark, J. D. (1971). Problems of archaeological nomenclature and definition in the Congo Basin. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 26, 67–78.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1972). Palaeolithic butchery practices. In Ucko, P. J., Tringham, R. and Dimbleby, G. W. (eds.), Man, settlement and urbanism, 149–56. London and Morristown, N.J.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1974a). The Kalambo Falls prehistoric site, vol. II. Cambridge.
Clark, J. D. (1974b). The stone artefacts from Cornelia, O.F.S., South Africa. In Butzer, K. W., Clark, J. D. and Cooke, H. B. S. (eds.), The geology, archaeology and fossil mammals of the Cornelia Beds, O.F.S., 33–62. National Museum, Bloemfontein.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.) (1976). Prétirage du Colloque V du IX Congrés de l'Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques (Nice, 1976).
Clark, J. D. and Kurashina, H. (1976). New Plio-Pleistocene archaeological occurrences from the plain of Gadeb, Upper Webi Shebele basin, Ethiopia, and a statistical comparison of the Gadeb sites with other Early Stone Age assemblages. In Clark, J. D. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.), Prétirage du Colloque V du IX Congrés de l'Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques (Nice, 1976), 158–216. Nice.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D. (1979). Hominid occupation of the east-central Highlands of Ethiopia in the Plio-Pleistocene. Nature, Lond, 282, 33–9.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D., Oakley, K. P., Wells, L. H. and McClelland, J. A. C. (1950). New studies on Rhodesian man. Jl R. antbrop. Inst. 77, 7–32.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D., Williams, M. A. J. and Smith, A. B. (1975). The geomorphology and archaeology of Adrar Bous, Central Sahara: a preliminary report. Quaternaria 17, 245–97.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D. (1969). World prehistory: a new outline. Cambridge.
Clarke, D. L. (1968). Analytical archaeology. London.
Cole, G. H. (1967). The later Acheulian and Sangoan of southern Uganda. In Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. (eds.), Background to evolution in Africa 481–528. Chicago.Google Scholar
Cole, S. (1963). The prehistory of East Africa. Harmondsworth and New York.
Coles, J. M. and , E. S. Higgs (1969). The archaeology of early man. London.
Colette, J. R. F. (1929). Le préhistorique dans le Bas-Congo. Bull. Soc. R. Belge d° Anthrop. Préhist. 44, 42–47.Google Scholar
Colette, J. R. F. (1931). Industries paléolithiques au Congo beige. In Congrés Internationale d° Anthropologie et d' Archéologie Préhistorique, Paris.Google Scholar
Cooke, H. B. S. (1958). Observations relating to Quaternary environments in East and Southern Africa. Trans. Geol. Soc. S. Afr. (Annex.) 60, 1–73.Google Scholar
Coppens, Y., Howell, F. C., Isaac, G. LI. and Leakey, R. E. F. (eds.) (1976). Earliest man and environments in the Lake Rudolf basin. Chicago.
Curtis, G. H., Drake, R., Cerling, T. E. and Hampel, J. H. (1975). Age of the KBS tuff in the Koobi Fora Formation, East Rudolf, Kenya. Nature, Lond. 258, 395–8.Google Scholar
Dart, R. A. (1949). The predatory implemental technique of Australopithecus. Am. J. phys. Anthrop. 7, 1–38.Google Scholar
Dart, R. A. (1957a). The osteodontokeratic culture of Australopithecus prometheus. Transv. Mus. Mem. 10.Google Scholar
Dart, R. A. (1957b). The Makapansgat Australopithecine osteodontokeratic culture. In Proceedings of the Third Pan-African Congress on Prehistory (Livingstone, 1955) 161–71. London.Google Scholar
Daveau-Ribeiro, S. and Biberson, P. (1972). Le Quaternaire et le Paléolithique de l'Adrar Mauritanien. In Actes de la VI session, Congrés Panafricain de Préhistoire (Dakar, 1967), 55–60. Chambéry.Google Scholar
Davies, O. (1964). The Quaternary in the coastlands of Guinea. Glasgow.
Davies, O. (1967). West Africa before the Europeans. London.
Deacon, H. J. (1970). The Acheulian occupation at Amanzi Springs, Uitenhage District, Cape Province. Ann. Cape Prov. Mus. 8. 89–189.Google Scholar
Deacon, H. J. (1975). Demography, subsistence, and culture during the Acheulian in Southern Africa. In Butzer, K. W. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.), After the australopithecines, 543–70.Google Scholar
Fock, G. J. (1968). Rooidam, a sealed site of the First Intermediate. S. Afr. J. Sci. 64, 153–9.Google Scholar
Gobert, E. G. (1950). Le gisement paléolithique de Sidi Zin. Karthago I, 1–63.
Goodall, J. Lawick (1968). The behaviour of free-living chimpanzees in the Gombe Stream area. Anim. Behav. Monog. I, 161–311.Google Scholar
Goodall, J. Lawick (1971). In the shadow of man. Glasgow.
Goodwin, A. J. H. and van Riet Lowe, C. (1929). Stone Age cultures of South Africa. Ann. S. Afr. Mus. 27, 1–289.
Gowlett, J. A. J. (1978). Kilombe — an Acheulian site complex in Kenya. In Bishop, W. W. (ed.), Geological background to fossil man, 337–60. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Hansen, C. L. and Keller, C. M. (1971). Environment and activity patterning at Isimila Karongo, Iringa District, Tanzania: a preliminary report. Am. Anthrop. 73, 1201–11.Google Scholar
Harris, J. W. K. and Bishop, W. W. (1976). Sites and assemblages from the early Pleistocene beds of Karari and Chesowanja, Kenya. In Prétirage du Colloque V du IX Congrés de l'Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques (Nice, 1976), 70–117. Nice.Google Scholar
Harris, J. W. K. and Herbich, I. (1978). Aspects of early Pleistocene hominid behaviour east of Lake Turkana, Kenya. In Bishop, W. W. (ed.), Geological background to fossil man, 529–47. Edinburgh and Toronto.Google Scholar
Harris, J. W. K. and Isaac, G. LI. (1976). The Karari industry: distinctive early Pleistocene archaeological material from the Koobi Fora Formation, Kenya. Nature, Lond. 262, 102–7.
Hay, R. L. (1976). The geology of Qlduvai Gorge. Berkeley.
Hay, R. L. (1980). The KBS controvery may be ended. Nature, Lond. 284, 401.
Heinzelin, J. (1961). Le Paléolithique aux abords d'Ishango. Exploration du Pare National Albert, pt. 6, 10–11. Brussels.Google Scholar
Horowitz, A. (1975). Preliminary palaeo-environmental implications of pollen analysis of Middle Breccia from Sterkfontein. Nature, Lond. 258, 417–18.
Howell, F. C. (1961). Isimila: a palaeolithic site in Africa. Scient. Am. 205 (4), 118–29.Google Scholar
Howell, F. C. (1965). Early Man. New York.
Howell, F. C. and Clark, J. D. (1963). Acheulian hunter-gatherers of sub-Saharan Africa. In Howell, F. C. and Bourliére, F., (eds.), African ecology and human evolution, 458–533. Chicago.Google Scholar
Howell, F. C. (1966) (eds.). Recent studies in paleoanthropology. Am. Anthrop. Special Publ. 68.Google Scholar
Howell, F. C. G. H. Cole and Kleindienst, M. R. (1962). Isimila, an Acheulian occupation site in the Iringa Highlands. In Actesdu IV Congrés Panafricain de Préhistoire et de l'Etude du Quaternaire, 43–80. Tervuren.Google Scholar
Howell, F. C., Cole, G. H., Kleindienst, M. R., Szabo, B. J. and Oakley, K. P. (1972). Uranium series dating of bone from the Isimila prehistoric site, Tanzania. Nature, Lond. 237, 51–2.
Hughes, A. R. and Tobias, P. V. (1977). A fossil skull probably of the genus Homo from Sterkfontien, Transvaal, Nature, Lond. 265, 310–12.
Hugot, H.-J. (ed.) (1962). Missions Berliet Ténéré Tchad. Paris.
Humphreys, A. J. B. (1969). Later Acheulian or Fauresmith? A contribution. Ann. Cape Prov. 6, (10), 87–101.Google Scholar
Humphreys, A. J. B. (1970). The role of raw material and the concept of the Fauresmith. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 35, 139–44.Google Scholar
Hurford, A. J., Gleadow, A. and Naeser, C. (1976). Fission track dating of pumice from the KBS Tuff East Rudolf, Kenya. Nature, Lond. 263, 738–40.
Isaac, G. LI. (1966). New evidence from Olorgesailie relating to the character of Acheulian occupation sites. In Adas del V Congress Panafricano de Prehistoria y de Estudio del Cuaternario, 135–45.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1967). The stratigraphy of the Peninj group-early Middle Pleistocene formations west of Lake Natron, Tanzania. In Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. (eds.), Background to evolution in Africa, 229–57. Chicago.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1968). Traces of Pleistocene hunters: an East African example. In Lee, R. B. and Devore, I. (eds.), Man the hunter, 253–61. Chicago.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1969). Studies of early culture in East Africa. World Archaeol. 1, 1–28.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1971). The diet of early man: aspects of archaeological evidence from lower and middle Pleistocene sites in Africa. World Archaeol. 2, 278–99.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1972a). Early phases of human behaviour. In Clarke, D. L. (ed.), Models in archaeology, 149–56. London.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1972b). Chronology and tempo of cultural change during the Pleistocene. In Bishop, W. W. and Miller, J. A. (eds.), Calibration of hominoid evolution, 381–430. Edinburgh and Toronto.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1975). Stratigraphy and cultural patterns in East Africa during the middle ranges of Pleistocene time. In Butzer, K. W. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.), After the australopithecines, 495–542. The Hague.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1976a). East Africa as a source of fossil evidence for human evolution. In Isaac, G. LI. and McCown, E. R. (eds.), Human origins. Louis Leakey and the East African evidence, 121–38. Menlo Park.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1976b). The activities of early African hominids: a review of archaeological evidence from the time span two and a half million to one million years ago. In Isaac, G. LI. and McCown, E. R. (eds.), Human origins. Louis Leakey and the East African evidence, 483–514. Menlo Park.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1976c). Plio-Pleistocene artifact assemblages from East Rudolf, Kenya. In Coppens, Y. et al. (eds.), Earliest man and environments in the Lake Rudolf basin, 552–64. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Isaac, G. LI. (1977). Olorgesailie: the archaeology of a Middle Pleistocene lake basin in Kenya. Chicago.
Isaac, G. LI. and Curtis, G. H. (1974). The age of early Acheulian industries from the Peninj group, Tanzania. Nature, Lond. 249, 624–7.
Isaac, G. LI. and , E. R. McCown (eds.) (1976). Human origins. Louis Leakey and the East African evidence. Menlo Park.
Isaac, G. LI., Harris, J. W. K. and Grader, D. (1976). Archaeological evidence from the Koobi Fora Formation. In Coppens, Y. et al. (eds.), Earliest man and Environments in the lake Rudolf basin, 533–51. Chicago.Google Scholar
Isaac, G. LI., Leakey, R. E. F. and Behrensmeyer, A. K. (1971). Archaeological traces of early hominid activities, east of Lake Rudolf, Kenya. Science, N. Y. 173, 1129–34.
Jaeger, J. -J. (1975). The mammalian faunas and hominid fossils of the Middle Pleistocene of the Maghreb. In Butzer, K. W. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.), After the australopithecines, 399–418. The Hague.Google Scholar
Janmart, J. (1947). Stations préhistoriques de l'Angola du nord-est. Publicōes cult. Co. Diam. Angola I.
Janmart, J. (1953). The Kalahari Sands of Lunda (North-East Angola), their earlier redistribution and the Sangoan Culture. Publcões cult. Co. Diam. Angola 20.Google Scholar
Jolly, C. (1970). The seed-eaters: a new model of hominid differentiation based on baboon analogy. Man, 5, 5–26.Google Scholar
Jones, N. (1949). The prehistory of Southern Rhodesia. Cambridge.
Keller, C. M. (1973). Montagu Cave in prehistory: a descriptive analysis. Anthrop. Rec. Univ. Calif. 28.
Klein, R. G. (1973). Geological antiquity of Rhodesian man. Nature, Lond. 244, 311–12.
Klein, R. G. (1977). The ecology of early man in southern Africa. Science, N. Y. 197, 115–26.
Kleindienst, M. R. (1961). Variability within the Late Acheulian assemblage in eastern Africa. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 16, 55–52.Google Scholar
Kleindienst, M. R. (1967). Questions of terminology in regard to the study of Stone Age industries in eastern Africa — Culture stratigraphic units. In Bishop, W. W. and Clark, J. D. (eds.), Background to evolution in Africa, 821–59. Chicago.Google Scholar
Kleindienst, M. R. (1973). Excavations at Site JK, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, 1961–1962: the geological setting. Quaternaria 17, 145–208.Google Scholar
Leakey, L. S. B. (1931). The Stone Age cultures of Kenya Colony. Cambridge.
Leakey, L. S. B. (1934). Adam's ancestors. London.
Leakey, L. S. B. (1935). The Stone Age races of Kenya. Oxford.
Leakey, L. S. B. (1949). Tentative study of the Pleistocene climatic changes and Stone Age culture sequence in northeast Angola. Publcões Cult. Co. Diam. Angola 4.
Leakey, L. S. B. (1951). Olduvai Gorge, Cambridge.
Leakey, L. S. B. (1963). Very early East African Hominidae, and their ecological setting. In Howell, F. C. and Bourliére, F. (eds.), African ecology and human evolution, 448–57. Chicago.Google Scholar
Leakey, M. D. (1970a). Early artefacts from the Koobi Fora area. Nature, Lond. 226, 228–30.Google Scholar
Leakey, M. D. (1970b). New finds at the Swartkrans australopithecine site (continued). Stone artefacts from Swartkrans. Nature, Lond. 225, 1222–5.
Leakey, M. D. (1971). Olduvai Gorge, vol. III: Excavations in Beds I and II, 1960–1963. Cambridge.
Leakey, M. D. (1975). Cultural patterns in the Olduvai sequence. In Butzer, K. W. and Isaac, G. LI. (eds.), After the australopitbecines, 477–93. The Hague.Google Scholar
Leakey, M. G. and Leakey, R. E. F. (1978). Koobi Fora Research Project Volume I, 1968–1974: The fossil hominids and an introduction to their context. Oxford.
Leakey, Margaret, Tobias, P. V., Martyn, J. E. and Leakey, R. E. F. (1969). An Acheulian industry with prepared core technique and the discovery of a contemporary hominid mandible at Lake Baringo, Kenya. Proc. prehist. Soc. 35, 48–76.Google Scholar
Leakey, R. E. F. (1974). Further evidence of Lower Pleistocene hominids from East Rudolf, northern Kenya 1973. Nature, Lond. 248, 653–6.
Lee, C., Bada, J. L., and Patterson, E. (1976). Amino acid in modern and fossil woods. Nature, Lond. 259, 183–6.Google Scholar
Lowe, C. Riet (1952a). The Vaal river chronology. An up-to-date summary. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 2, 135–49.Google Scholar
Lowe, C. Riet (1952b). The Pleistocene geology and prehistory of Uganda, Part 2. Prehistory. Mem. Geol. Surv. Uganda 6.
Maguire, B. (1965). Foreign pebble pounding artefacts in the breccias and the overlying vegetation soil at Makapansgat limeworks. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 20, 117–30.Google Scholar
Mason, R. J. (1962a). Prehistory of the Transvaal. Johannesburg.
Mason, R. J. (1962b). Australopithecines and artefacts at Sterkfontein. II. The Sterk-fontein stone artefacts and their maker. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 17, 109–26.Google Scholar
Mason, R. J. (1965). Makapansgat limeworks fractured stone objects and natural fracture in Africa. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 20, 3–16.Google Scholar
Mason, R. J. (1969). The Oppermansdrif dam archaeological project – Vaal Basin. S. Afr. arcbaeol. Bull. 24, 182–92.Google Scholar
Mason, R. J. (1976). The earliest artefact assemblages of South Africa. In Pretirage du Colloque V du IX' Congrès de I'Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protobistoriques (Nice, 1976), 140–56. Nice.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M. (1960). The Stone Age of northern Africa. Harmondsworth.
Merrick, H. V. (1976). Recent archaeological research in the Plio-Pleistocene deposits of the lower Omo Valley, southwestern Ethiopia. In Isaac, G. LI. and McCown, E. R. (eds.), Human origins. Louis Leakey and the East African evidence, 461–82. Menlo Park.Google Scholar
Merrick, H. V. and Merrick, J. P. S. (1976). Archaeological occurrences of earlier Pleistocene age, from the Shungura formation In Coppens, Y. et al. (eds.), Earliest man and environments in the Lake Rudolf basin, 574–84. Chicago.Google Scholar
Merrick, H. V., Heinzelin, J., Haesaerts, P. and Howell, F. C. (1973). Archaeological occurrences of early Pleistocene age from the Shungura Formation, lower Omo valley, Ethiopia. Nature, Land. 242, 572–5.Google Scholar
Michels, J. (1973). Dating methods in archaeology. New York and London.
Moorsel, H. (1959). Paléolithique ancien à Léopoldville. Studia Universitatis Lovanium Fac. Sci. 9.
Mortelmans, G. (1957). La préhistoire du Congo belge. Revue de l'Université de Bruxelles, 2–3, 1–53.Google Scholar
Nenquin, J. (1966). Recent excavations in Rwanda and Burundi. In Actas del V Congreso Panafricano de Prehistoriay de Estudio del Cuaternario, 205–22. Santa Cruz de Tenerife.Google Scholar
Nenquin, J. (1967). Contributions to the study of prehistoric cultures of Rwanda and Burundi. Musée Royale de l'Afrique Centrale, Tervuren. Series 8 no. 59.Google Scholar
Oakley, K. P. (1956). The earliest fire makers. Antiquity 30, 102–7.Google Scholar
O'Brien, T. P. (1939). The prehistory of Uganda Protectorate. Cambridge.
Ogusu, B. W. (1973). Was there a Sangoan industry in West Africa? W. Afr. J. Archaeol. 3, 191–6.Google Scholar
Piperno, M. and Piperno, G. M. Bulgarelli (1975). First approach to the ecological and cultural significance of the early Palaeolithic Occupation Site of Garba IV at Melka Kunturé (Ethiopia). Quaternaria 18, 374–82.Google Scholar
Robinson, J. T. (1962). Australopithecines and artefacts at Sterkfontein, Part I. Sterkfontein stratigraphy and the significance of the extension site. S. Afr. Archaeol. Bull. 17, 87–108.Google Scholar
Roche, H. and Tiercelin, J.-J. (1977). Découverte d'une industrie lithique ancienne in situ dans la formation d'Hadar, Afar central, Ethiopie. C.r. Acad. Sci., Paris 284-D, 1871–4.Google Scholar
Roubet, C. (1969). Essai de datation absolue d'un biface-hachereau paléolithique de l'Afar (Ethiopie). Anthropologie, Paris 73, 503–24.Google Scholar
Said, R. (1975). The geological evolution of the River Nile. In Wendorf, F. and Marks, A. E. (eds.), Problems in prehistory: North Africa and the Levant, 7–44. Dallas.Google Scholar
Sampson, C. G. (1974). The Stone Age archaeology of Southern Africa. London and New York.
Sandford, K. S. (1934). Paleolithic Man and the Nile Valley in Upper and Middle Egypt. Publs. Orient. lnst. Univ. Chicago 18.
Sandford, K. W. and Arkell, A. J. (1933). Palaeolithic man and the Nile Valley in Nubia and Upper Egypt. Publs. Orient. Inst. Univ. Chicago 17.
Singer, R. J. and Wymer, J. (1968). Archaeological investigations at the Saldanha skull site in South Africa. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 23, 63–74.Google Scholar
Söhnge, P. G., Visser, D. J. L. and Lowe, C. Riet (1937). The geology and archaeology of the Vaal River basin. Mem. geol. surv. Un. S. Afr. 35.Google Scholar
Soper, R. (1965). The stone age in northern Nigeria. J. hist. Soc. Nigeria 3, 175–94.Google Scholar
Stearns, C. E. and Thurber, D. L. (1965). Th/U dates of late Pleistocene marine fossils from the Mediterranean and Moroccan littorals. Quaternaria 7, 29–42.Google Scholar
Stiles, D. N., Hay, R. L. and O'Neil, J. R. (1974). The MNK Chert Factory Site, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. World Archaeol 5, 285–308.Google Scholar
Thurber, D. L. (1972). Problems in dating non-woody materials from continental environments. In Bishop, W. W. and Miller, J. A. (eds.), Calibration of hominoid evolution, 1–18. Edinburgh and Toronto.Google Scholar
Tobias, P. V. and Hughes, A. R. (1969). The new Witwatersrand University excavation at Sterkfontein. Progress report, some problems and first results. S. Afr. archaeol. Bull. 24, 158–69.Google Scholar
Vaufrey, R. (1955). Préhistoire de l' Afrique, Tome I, Le Maghreb. Institut des Hautes Etudes de Tunis, vol. IV. Paris.Google Scholar
Vrba, E. S. (1975). Some evidence of chronology and palaeoecology of Sterkfontein, Swartkrans and Kromdraai from the fossil Bovidae. Nature, Lond. 254, 301–4.Google Scholar
Vrba, E. S. (1976). The fossil Bovidae of Sterkfontein, Swartkrans and Kromdraai. Transv. Mus. Mem. 21, 1–166.Google Scholar
Washburn, S. L. and Lancaster, C. S. (1968). The evolution of hunting. In Lee, R. B. and Devore, I. (eds.), Man the hunter, 293–303. Chicago.Google Scholar
Washburn, S. L. and Moore, R. (1974). Ape into man. Boston.
Wayland, E. J. (1926). A possible age correlation of the Kafu Gravels. Uganda Protectorate, Annual Report, Geological Department, 1926.
Wendorf, F. (ed.) (1968). The Prehistory of Nubia, 2 vols. Dallas.
Wendorf, F. and Schild, R. (1974). A Middle Stone Age sequence from the Central Rift Valley, Ethiopia. Warsaw.
Wendorf, F., Schild, R., Said, R., Haynes, C. V., Gautier, A. and Kobusiewicz, M. (1976). The prehistory of the Egyptian Sahara. Science, N.Y. 193, 103–14.Google Scholar
Wendorf, F., Laury, R. L., Albritton, C. C., Schild, R., Haynes, C. V., Damon, P., Shaffiquillah, M. and Scarborough, R. (1975). Dates for the Middle Stone Age of East Africa. Science, N.Y. 187, 740–2.Google Scholar
Wright, R. V. (1972). Imitative learning of a flaked stone technology – the case of an orang-utan. Mankind 8, 296–306.Google Scholar
Zihlman, A. and Tanner, N. (1978). Gathering and the hominid adaptation. In Tiger, L. and Fowler, H. (eds.), Female bierarchies, 163–94. Chicago.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×