Analysis of 124 rounded fossils, potential bone tools, from the 2.04–1.95 Ma early hominin-bearing Drimolen Main Quarry palaeocave deposits in South Africa were subject to comparative analysis of fossil and bone collections with known taphonomic accumulator/s, actualistic experiments, and comparative analysis relative to published data in the taphonomic literature. From this sample, 51 specimens were identified as bone tools. The inclusion of these specimens raises the number of bone tools identified at Drimolen Main Quarry to 65. The bone tools have a rounded tip and an associated use-wear pattern that is restricted to, and radiates from, this rounded tip. Diaphyseal fragments were the most common raw material selected for tool use. We hypothesise that the raw material was collected from both carnivore kill and natural death sites. The striation patterns, identified though visual comparisons, present on the bone tools comprise parallel, subparallel and diagonal striations which suggests that the tools may have had a multi-use application. The place of bone technology within the South African Earlier Stone Age is also discussed.
Funding
This research was funded by Australian Research Council Future Fellowship Grant FT120100399 to AIRH and ARC Discovery Grant DP170100056 to AIRH and JWA. This work was also supported by a La Trobe University Postgraduate Research Scholarship, a La Trobe University Internal Research Grant and the Australian Archaeology Association Student Grant to RCS as part of PhD research conducted at La Trobe University.