6533b7d5fe1ef96bd126479e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

After the emergence of the Acheulean at Melka Kunture (Upper Awash, Ethiopia): From Gombore IB (1.6 Ma) to Gombore Iγ (1.4 Ma), Gombore Iδ (1.3 Ma) and Gombore II OAM Test Pit C (1.2 Ma)

Rita Teresa MelisFlavio AltamuraMargherita MussiLaura PioliGiancarlo RutaGiancarlo RutaEduardo Méndez-quintasFlavia PiarulliDenis GeraadsLuca Di BiancoSabine Gaudzinski-windheuserJoaquín PaneraSol Sánchez-dehesa GalánRaymonde Bonnefille

subject

010506 paleontologybiologyPleistoceneMelka KuntureVegetationHomo erectus/Ergaster adaptation010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesArchaeologyGeographyVolcanismHuman evolution[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studiesEast africaPeriod (geology)Assemblage (archaeology)Homo erectusLower PleistoceneComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSAcheuleanAcheulean0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes

description

International audience; While the emergence of the Acheulean is well documented in East Africa at ~1.7 Ma, subsequent developments are less well understood and to some extent controversial. Here, we provide robust evidence regarding the time period between 1.6 Ma and 1.2 Ma, based on an interdisciplinary approach to the stratigraphic sequences exposed in the Gombore gully of Melka Kunture, in the upper Awash Valley of Ethiopia. Throughout the Pleistocene, the environment differed significantly from elsewhere in Africa because of the elevation at 2000 m asl, the cooler and rainy climate, the Afromontane vegetation, the development of endemic animal species, and the recurrent impact of volcanic activity. At Gombore IB, dated ~1.6 Ma, remains of Homo erectus/ergaster have been discovered, associated with a rich early Acheulean assemblage. The techno-typological analysis of the lithic record from Gombore Iγ (~1.4 Ma) and Gombore Iδ (~1.3 Ma), where substantial areas have been excavated, and the contrasting evidence from Gombore OAM Test Pit C (~1.2 Ma), suggest that the scarcity or lack of large flakes and large cutting tools at the two earlier sites is possibly not just the outcome of sampling bias, but rather of the adaptation of H. erectus/ergaster to the local resources, in a relatively isolated environment. The sites of Gombore gully provide new evidence on the complex pattern of human evolution and adaptation in East Africa during the Lower Pleistocene.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2021.02.031