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New Oldowan locality Sare-Abururu (ca. 1.7 Ma) provides evidence of diverse hominin behaviors on the Homa Peninsula, Kenya

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posted on 2024-05-30, 05:41 authored by EM Finestone, TW Plummer, TH Vincent, SA Blumenthal, PW Ditchfield, LC Bishop, JS Oliver, Andrew HerriesAndrew Herries, CV Palfery, TP Lane, E McGuire, JS Reeves, A Rodés, E Whitfield, DR Braun, SK Bartilol, NK Rotich, JA Parkinson, C Lemorini, I Caricola, RN Kinyanjui, R Potts
The Homa Peninsula, in southwestern Kenya, continues to yield insights into Oldowan hominin landscape behaviors. The Late Pliocene locality of Nyayanga (∼3–2.6 Ma) preserves some of the oldest Oldowan tools. At the Early Pleistocene locality of Kanjera South (∼2 Ma) toolmakers procured a diversity of raw materials from over 10 km away and strategically reduced them in a grassland-dominated ecosystem. Here, we report findings from Sare-Abururu, a younger (∼1.7 Ma) Oldowan locality approximately 12 km southeast of Kanjera South and 18 km east of Nyayanga. Sare-Abururu has yielded 1754 artifacts in relatively undisturbed low-energy silts and sands. Stable isotopic analysis of pedogenic carbonates suggests that hominin activities were carried out in a grassland-dominated setting with similar vegetation structure as documented at Kanjera South. The composition of a nearby paleo-conglomerate indicates that high-quality stone raw materials were locally abundant. Toolmakers at Sare-Abururu produced angular fragments from quartz pebbles, representing a considerable contrast to the strategies used to reduce high quality raw materials at Kanjera South. Although lithic reduction at Sare-Abururu was technologically simple, toolmakers proficiently produced cutting edges, made few mistakes and exhibited a mastery of platform management, demonstrating that expedient technical strategies do not necessarily indicate a lack of skill or suitable raw materials. Lithic procurement and reduction patterns on the Homa Peninsula appear to reflect variation in local resource contexts rather than large-scale evolutionary changes in mobility, energy budget, or toolmaker cognition.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grants DDIA#1836669 and #1327047), the L.S.B. Leakey Foundation, the Peter Buck Fund for Human Origins Research (Smithsonian Institution), William H. Donner Foundation (R.P., T.W.P.) and NERC CIAF Grant (9170-0416).

History

Publication Date

2024-05-01

Journal

Journal of Human Evolution

Volume

190

Article Number

103498

Pagination

24p.

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0047-2484

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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