石点变异性揭示了东非中石器时代人口的空间、时间和环境结构

Lucy Timbrell, Behailu Habte, Yosef Tefera, Christine Maroma, Emmanuel Ndiema, Kimberly Plomp, James Blinkhorn, Matt Grove
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引用次数: 0

摘要

石点是用来定义非洲中石器时代(MSA)的关键特征之一。随着时间的推移,其形状和大小的区域模式被认为反映了群体间的相互作用和人口网络,并用于定义MSA内的文化阶段。然而,东非没有独特和广泛应用的年代地层点变体来划分其MSA记录,这通常被描述为高度可变的。本文介绍了东非MSA点的度量和几何形态计量学分析,并评估了与距离、时间和环境隔离的零模型相关的这些点变化的潜在驱动因素。在我们的样本中,大约一半的形状差异可以用空间、时间和环境差异以及大小来解释,这表明通过持续的文化传播有一定程度的人口连续性。剩下的部分差异可能代表了组合之间的风格差异,这通常是考古研究的兴趣主题。东非MSA高度多变的性质可能反映了该地区在非洲大陆内的避难定位,在MSA期间,点技术是一种灵活的适应系统,根据不同的社会和生态环境在非洲各地动态应用,导致在特定时间和地点出现“通用”和“特定”工具形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stone point variability reveals spatial, chronological and environmental structuring of eastern African Middle Stone Age populations
Stone points are one of the key features used to define the African Middle Stone Age (MSA). Regional patterns in their shape and size through time have been thought to reflect inter-group interactions and networks of populations and are used to define cultural phases within the MSA. However, eastern Africa does not have distinctive and widely applied chrono-stratigraphic point variants that divide its MSA record, which is often described as being highly variable. This paper presents a metric and geometric morphometric analysis of eastern African MSA points and evaluates potential drivers of variation in them in relation to null models of isolation by distance, time and environment. Approximately half of the shape variance in our sample can be explained by spatial, temporal and environmental differences, as well as by size, indicating a degree of demographic continuity through sustained cultural transmission. A portion of the remaining variance likely represents stylistic differences between assemblages, which are often the subject of interest in archaeological studies. The highly variable nature of the eastern African MSA may reflect the region’s refugial positioning within the continent, with point technology a flexible adaptive system that was dynamically employed across Africa during the MSA depending on varying social and ecological contexts, resulting in the appearance of both ‘generic’ and ‘specific’ tool forms at particular times and places.
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