La Trobe

Why large Flakes? Later Acheulian handaxe manufacture at Amanzi Springs, Area 2 (Eastern Cape, South Africa)

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-18, 23:09 authored by Coen WilsonCoen Wilson, Matthew V Caruana, Alexander BlackwoodAlexander Blackwood, Lee J Arnold, Andrew HerriesAndrew Herries
Recent studies have identified differences in handaxe reduction strategies within the Acheulian assemblages from Amanzi Springs, with operational sequences that involve a variety of giant core methods to produce large flake blanks, as well as being made directly on cobbles. Despite these different blank selection patterns, there is a general standardisation in the final morphology of handaxes from Area 2 (∼530 – <408 ka). This study uses three-dimensional geometric morphometric, descriptive statistics and diacritical analyses to explore large flake usage at the site, and its implications in handaxe morphology and manufacture. Our results demonstrate that Amanzi knappers used large flake blanks with standardised characteristics and morphologies to shortcut challenging technical aspects of handaxe production. Despite previous descriptions of handaxes being large and unstandardised in appearance, Middle Pleistocene knappers at Amanzi Springs were able to anticipate challenges of the locally available raw materials by producing a range of large flake blank morphologies to overcome knapping mishaps.

Funding

Research at Amanzi Springs is funded by Australian Research Council Discovery Projects (DP170101139 and DP200100194) awarded to AIRH and a National Geographic Explorer grant (GR -000046142) to AIRH, MVC, LJA, and AFB. The Artec Space Spider scanner was funded through AIRH's Australian Research Council Future Fellowship grant (FT120100399) . CW was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship while completing a PhD through La Trobe University.

History

Publication Date

2024-02-01

Journal

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports

Volume

53

Article Number

104393

Pagination

15p.

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

2352-409X

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Author(s). 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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