2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2016.11.002
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The earliest long-distance obsidian transport: Evidence from the ∼200 ka Middle Stone Age Sibilo School Road Site, Baringo, Kenya

Abstract: This study presents the earliest evidence of long-distance obsidian transport at the ∼200 ka Sibilo School Road Site (SSRS), an early Middle Stone Age site in the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya. The later Middle Pleistocene of East Africa (130-400 ka) spans significant and interrelated behavioral and biological changes in human evolution including the first appearance of Homo sapiens. Despite the importance of the later Middle Pleistocene, there are relatively few archaeological sites in well-dated contexts (n < 1… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…We propose that the multilevel structure observed in extant hunter-gatherers may explain the cultural dynamism of H. sapiens since its origins and its worldwide expansion. We believe that multilevel structuring already characterized Middle Stone Age populations emerging as early as 320,000 years ago, which were also known to have established trade dyads connecting sites up to 160 km apart (7,21). As hunter-gatherers expanded within and then out of Africa in small and interconnected bands, potential consequences may have included cultural recombination preceding "local revolutions" such as the Upper Paleolithic (22) and genetic introgression among H. sapiens and other hominin species (23,24).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…We propose that the multilevel structure observed in extant hunter-gatherers may explain the cultural dynamism of H. sapiens since its origins and its worldwide expansion. We believe that multilevel structuring already characterized Middle Stone Age populations emerging as early as 320,000 years ago, which were also known to have established trade dyads connecting sites up to 160 km apart (7,21). As hunter-gatherers expanded within and then out of Africa in small and interconnected bands, potential consequences may have included cultural recombination preceding "local revolutions" such as the Upper Paleolithic (22) and genetic introgression among H. sapiens and other hominin species (23,24).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…the hxaro system of the !Kung: Hrdy), and expanding populations may be able to extend such exchanges to neighboring communities that historically emerged from the same community. Such friendly relations with distant bands of large communities and potentially non‐hostile neighboring communities also allow trade, for instance of raw materials for superior tools (e.g., Blegen). This development may have become possible due to the emergence of full‐blown language around the same time, because it allows naming and thus the specification of genealogical relationships and the spreading and management of reputation.…”
Section: Human Self‐domestication Reconsideredmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Long-term, large-scale population separation may also have been the norm for much of Pleistocene Africa (Box 1; i.e., isolation by distance and isolation by habitat, representing null models to be rejected). Rare and spatially explicit models exploring Pleistocene technological innovations have also linked cultural complexity with variation in regional patterns of population growth, mobility, and connectedness (e.g., [36,44,45]), supported by evidence of long-distance transfer of stone raw material (e.g., [46]).…”
Section: A Pan-african Cultural Patchworkmentioning
confidence: 99%