The Florisbad archaeological and paleontological site is a provincial heritage site in Soutpan in the Free State province of South Africa. The most notable find at this site is the Florisbad Skull, the partial skull of an early human species that was discovered in 1932. [1]
In 1997 it was described in the Government Gazette as:[ citation needed ]
The Florisbad fossil site consists of a sequence of Quaternary deposits associated with a thermal spring, situated 45 km NNW of Bloemfontein in central South Africa (28°46’S, 26°04’E). There are two kinds of fossil context at Florisbad: naturally accumulated vertebrate fossil material from spring sedimentary contexts, which includes the human skull fragment, and archaeological remains from old land surfaces. The material from spring contexts represents mainly the remains of ancient carnivore hunting and scavenging around palaeo-waterholes associated with the spring. Spring sediments intrude into the horizontal or sub-horizontal deposits, which, in some cases, represent stable land surfaces. These land surfaces are, to a greater or lesser degree, disturbed by post-depositional spring action and saturation during times of a higher water table...The Florisbad fossil locality is internationally known for producing a pre-modern human skull, Middle Pleistocene fossil vertebrates and Middle Stone Age artefacts...
The stratigraphic nature of the site is characterized by distinct sand and peat layers, with the latter allowing for increased preservation of organic materials. The artifact-rich mound contains deposits ranging from the late Middle Pleistocene through to the early Holocene. [2] Excavations at this site go back to the early twentieth century, and a variety of artifact assemblages have been recovered from the site, including faunal remains and lithics.
The most widely known faunal assemblages from the Florisbad spring site comprise what is known as the Florisian Land Mammal Age. [3] These fossils are considered a type assemblage, and as such help define the Middle Stone Age fauna of southern Africa. [4] The faunal materials that make up the Florisian Land Mammal Age have been shown to lack human alteration; many of these bones show evidence of natural death, carnivorous scavenging, and long-term exposure to the elements on the land surface. [4] This is consistent with a faunal assemblage that accumulated naturally, as opposed to being deposited by human hunting, butchery, or scavenging activities. [4]
In contrast to the Florisian Land Mammal Age type assemblage, there are faunal remains from the Florisbad site that can linked to human occupation in a later phase of the Middle Stone Age. [4] These fossils show no distinct marks indicative of carnivorous scavenging, but they do show evidence of intentional fragmentation consistent with human strategies for bone marrow extraction. [4]
Lithic artifacts were found throughout the vertical excavation layers of the Florisbad spring site, and they generally fall into one of four sequential groups: the "Macrolithic" industry, the Florisbad Industry, the Middle Stone Age industry, and the Late Stone Age Lockshoek Industry. [4]
Recovered from the base of the site, the assemblage of artifacts termed "Macrolithics" can be attributed to either the later Early Stone Age or the early Middle Stone Age, with a lack of diagnostic artifacts complicating this categorization. [4] These artifacts include retouched scrapers, unretouched flakes, and a core. [4]
The Florisbad Industry assemblage is composed largely of Middle Stone Age lithics that are highly retouched, which is what differentiates them from the more general, unretouched Middle Stone Age lithics at the site. [4] This assemblage category includes cores, retouched flakes, and a retouched, bifacial blade, and it has been used for comparison with other nearby sites. [4]
The Middle Stone Age industry assemblage is mostly composed of robust cores and thick flakes without rounded edges. [4] Most of these artifacts are unretouched and were associated in situ with faunal remains that bear evidence of human alteration. [4] This association between the large Middle Stone Age artifact assemblage and the Middle Stone Age human occupation at Florisbad has led researchers to conclude that these lithics may be the products of artifact manufacture and comprise a specialized industry used for animal butchering. [4]
The Late Stone Age Lockshoek Industry is characterized by large diagnostic convex scrapers, and the assemblage at Florisbad is made mostly of hornfels. [4] Comparative analysis to dated assemblages places the Lockshoek Industry artifacts in the early Holocene. [4]
Evidence of multiple, short-term human occupations during the Middle Stone Age are present at the site. In addition to the Middle Stone Age lithics industry assemblage, the same deposit contained a hearth, charcoal fragments, burnt animal bone fragments, and faunal remains with evidence of human alteration and butchery. [4] Together, these lines of evidence point to a specialized butchery and tool-making activities over repeated short periods of time.
Analysis has also been done on wooden fragments recovered from layers of peat at the site. One wooden artifact was found to have intentional cut marks on its surface, but its functional use has not been determined. [5] This fragment has been classified as a Middle Stone Age artifact, and the wood from which it is made has been identified as the kundanyoka knobwood (Zanthoxylum chalybeum). This wood is not native to South Africa, where the artifact was recovered, but does occur naturally in parts of Zimbabwe. [5]
The Olduvai Gorge or Oldupai Gorge in Tanzania is one of the most important paleoanthropological localities in the world; the many sites exposed by the gorge have proven invaluable in furthering understanding of early human evolution. A steep-sided ravine in the Great Rift Valley that stretches across East Africa, it is about 48 km long, and is located in the eastern Serengeti Plains within the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in the Olbalbal ward located in Ngorongoro District of Arusha Region, about 45 kilometres from Laetoli, another important archaeological locality of early human occupation. The British/Kenyan paleoanthropologist-archeologist team of Mary and Louis Leakey established excavation and research programs at Olduvai Gorge that achieved great advances in human knowledge and are world-renowned. The site is registered as one of the National Historic Sites of Tanzania.
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The Omo Kibish Formation or simply Kibish Formation is a geological formation in the Lower Omo Valley of southwestern Ethiopia. It is named after the nearby Omo River and is subdivided into four members known as Members I-IV. The members are numbered in the order in which they were deposited and date between 196 ka ~ 13-4 ka. Omo Kibish and the neighboring formations have produced a rich paleoanthropological record with many hominin and stone tool finds. The Kibish formation, in particular, is most notable for Richard Leakey's work there in 1967 during which he and his team found one of the oldest remains of anatomically modern Homo sapiens. Known as Omo Kibish 1, the fossil was dated to 196 ± 5 ka old and is among two other Omo remains that were found in Member I. The Omo fossils were more recently re-dated to approximately 233 ± 22 ka old. In the early 2000s a research boom enriched the knowledge base about the Kibish Formation. Study of the faunal remains and stone tools provided insight into the archeological associations of Homo sapiens and thereby their behaviors and the complex environmental contexts in which they lived and evolved.
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Enkapune Ya Muto, also known as Twilight Cave, is a site spanning the late Middle Stone Age to the Late Stone Age on the Mau Escarpment of Kenya. This time span has allowed for further study of the transition from the Middle Stone Age to the Late Stone Age. In particular, the changes in lithic and pottery industries can be tracked over these time periods as well as transitions from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to a herding lifestyle. Beads made of perforated ostrich egg shells found at the site have been dated to 40,000 years ago. The beads found at the site represent the early human use of personal ornaments. Inferences pertaining to climate and environment changes during the pre-Holocene and Holocene period have been made based from faunal remains based in this site.
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The Florisbad Skull is an important human fossil of the early Middle Stone Age, representing either late Homo heidelbergensis or early Homo sapiens. It was discovered in 1932 by T. F. Dreyer at the Florisbad site, Free State Province, South Africa.
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Scladina, or Sclayn Cave, is an archaeological site located in Wallonia in the town of Sclayn, in the Andenne hills in Belgium, where excavations since 1978 have provided the material for an exhaustive collection of over thirteen thousand Mousterian stone artifacts and the fossilized remains of an especially ancient Neanderthal, called the Scladina child were discovered in 1993.
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People first began to be interested in Malawi's prehistoric past in the 1920s. Excavations of sites in nearby countries, Tanzania and Zambia, made archaeologists believe that they may find the same type of material culture in Malawi. In the 1920s, a series of lacustrine deposits was found at the northwest end of Lake Malawi. These beds contained fragmentary fossils and were mapped by Dr. F. Dixey. These findings sparked an interest to excavate more locations in Malawi.
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