78,000-year-old record of Middle and Later Stone Age innovation in an East African tropical forest
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-26, 06:01authored byCeri Shipton, Patrick Roberts, Will Archer, Simon J Armitage, Caesar Bita, James Blinkhorn, Colin Courtney-Mustaphi, Alison Crowther, Richard Curtis, Francesco d' Errico, Katerina Douka, Patrick Faulkner, Huw S Groucutt, Richard Helm, Andrew HerriesAndrew Herries, Severinus Jembe, Nikos Kourampas, Julia Lee-Thorp, Rob Marchant, Julio Mercader, Africa Pitarch Marti, Mary E Prendergast, Ben Rowson, Amini Tengeza, Ruth Tibesasa, Tom S White, Michael D Petraglia, Nicole Boivin
The Middle to Later Stone Age transition in Africa has been debated as a significant shift in human technological, cultural, and cognitive evolution. However, the majority of research on this transition is currently focused on southern Africa due to a lack of long-term, stratified sites across much of the African continent. Here, we report a 78,000-year-long archeological record from Panga ya Saidi, a cave in the humid coastal forest of Kenya. Following a shift in toolkits ~67,000 years ago, novel symbolic and technological behaviors assemble in a non-unilinear manner. Against a backdrop of a persistent tropical forest-grassland ecotone, localized innovations better characterize the Late Pleistocene of this part of East Africa than alternative emphases on dramatic revolutions or migrations.