Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:59:16.705Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early tool-making in Asia: two-million-year-old artefacts in Pakistan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

R.W. Dennell
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield, Sheffield s10 2TN
H. Rendell
Affiliation:
Geography Laboratory, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9ON. E
E. Hailwood
Affiliation:
Department of Oceanography, University of Southampton, Southampton SO9 5NH

Abstract

For the last half-century, the story of very early hominids, and their stone industries, has been almost exclusively ‘in Africa’. This first report of a very early industry takes the story ‘out of Africa’ and into the Indian sub-continent – that is, in a geographical direction towards the early industries of eastern Asia.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1988

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

Clark, J.D. 1958. The natural fracture of pebbles from the Bakota Gorge, Northern Rhodesia, and its bearing on the Kafuan industries of Africa. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 24: 6477.Google Scholar
Coles, J.M. 1968. Ancient man in Europe, in Coles, J.M. & Simpson, D.D.A. (ed.), Studies in ancient Europe: essays presented to Stuart Piggott: 1743. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Cooke, B. 1983. Human evolution: the geological framework, Canadian Journal of Anthropology 3 (2): 14361.Google Scholar
Day, M. 1986. Guide to fossil man. 4th edition. London: Cassell.Google Scholar
Dennell, R.W., Rendell, H.M., & Halim, M.A.. 1985. New perspectives on the Palaeolithic of northern Pakistan, in Schotsman, J. & Taddei, M. (ed.), South Asian archaeology, 1983: 920. Naples: Istituto Università Orientale. No. 23.Google Scholar
Howell, C. 1985. Introduction, in Smith, F. & Spencer, F. (ed.), The origins of modern man: iiixxii. New York: Alan Liss.Google Scholar
Johnson, G.D. et al. 1982. The occurrence and fission-track ages of late Neogene and Quaternary volcanic sediments, Siwalik group, northern Pakistan, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology & Palaeoecology 37: 6393.Google Scholar
Ninkovich, D. & Burckle, L.H.. 1978. Absolute age of the base of the hominid-bearing beds in eastern Java, Nature 275: 3067.Google Scholar
Okladinov, A.P. & Pospelova, G.A.. 1982. Ulalinka, the oldest palaeolithic site in Siberia, Current Anthropology 23 (6): 71012.Google Scholar
Opdyke, N.D et al. 1983. Evidence for earlier date of Ubediya, Israel, hominid site, Nature 304: 375.Google Scholar
Pope, C.G. & Cronin, J.E.. 1983. The Asian hominidae. Journal of Human Evolution 12: 37796.Google Scholar
Pope, C.G. et al. 1986. Earliest radiometrically dated artefacts from SE Asia, Current Anthropology 27 (3): 27579.Google Scholar
Rendell, H.M. & Dennell, R.W.. 1985. Dated lower palaeolithic artefacts from northern Pakistan, Current Anthropology 26 (3): 393.Google Scholar
Rendell, H.M., Hailwood, E. & Dennell, R.W.. 1987. Palaeomagnetic dating of a two million year old artefact-bearing horizon at Riwat, northern Pakistan, Earth & Planetary Science Letters 85: 48896.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Repenning, C.A. & Fejfar, O.. 1982. Evidence for earlier date of Ubediya, Israel, hominid site, Nature 299: 34447.Google Scholar
Stiles, N. 1978. Palaeolithic artefacts in Siwalik and post-Siwalik deposits of northern Pakistan, Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers 53–4: 12948.Google Scholar
Terra, H. de & Paterson, T.T. 1939. Studies of the ice age of India. Washington (DC): Carnegie Institute. Publication 493.Google Scholar