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Palaeoenvironments of the Middle Stone Age at Sibudu Cave, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: An analysis of archaeological charcoal

PhD - Science / Analysis of charcoal from Middle Stone Age layers at Sibudu Cave, KwaZulu-Natal,
shows evidence of environmental change during the Last Glacial. Layers analysed

encompass the end of the cold stadial, Oxygen Isotope Stage (OIS) 4, and the warmer

interstadial, OIS 3. Layers are divided – on the basis of lithic industry associations

and taxonomic content – into the Howiesons Poort (HP) (dated to ca. 61 000 years

ago), and the early, middle and late post-HP assemblages (ca. 60-55 000, 55-50 000

and 50-33 000 years ago respectively). This project aims to identify evidence for

environmental change, characterise this change using qualitative and quantitative

analyses, and compare the results to evidence from other proxies at Sibudu Cave and

elsewhere in South Africa.

HP layers (GS, GR, GR2) are dominated by evergreen forest taxa, including

Podocarpus spp., Buxus sp., Brachylaena sp., Sapium/Spirostachys and Ptaeroxylon

obliquum. Kirkia sp. suggests a warm, woodland savanna habitat grew beyond the

forest vegetation. Early post-HP layers (Eb, SPCA, BSp) contain taxa from

evergreen, riverine forest communities, including Erica spp., Leucosidea sericea, and

Rapanea melanophloeos. Some of the taxa in these layers suggest a shift in

vegetation, possibly related to the marine regression of the Last Glacial, bringing taxa

currently found further inland towards the site. Fewer evergreen forest components,

and more bushveld taxa, are present in the middle post-HP (RSp, OMOD, MOD) than

in the previous layers. Some of the taxa are only found in northern South Africa in

regions that are significantly drier than modern KwaZulu-Natal. These layers also

contain more Acacia spp. and other Fabaceae taxa and fewer Erica spp. than the

samples from the early post-HP. This may be a result of environmental change, a

change in wood selection, charcoal fragmentation, or sampling bias. Layer Bu, within

the late post-HP, contains evergreen and deciduous taxa many of which are found in

KwaZulu-Natal today. Kirkia sp. again provides evidence for a dry habitat not

iv

currently found in the region. Many Types were defined in Bu, which may indicate a

vegetation community for which there is currently no reference material.

Temperature and moisture indices produced using the Factor Analysis suggest warm

and moist conditions during the HP layers. During the early post-HP conditions

became cooler with intermediate moisture levels. Subsequently, conditions were

warm and dry (middle post-HP) and then warm with a little more moisture indicated

(late post-HP).

Good fuelwoods were routinely collected during the post-HP. In contrast, the HP

layers are dominated by Podocarpus spp. and many of the good fuelwoods, such as

Acacia spp. and Erica spp., are absent. This pattern may be a result of changes in the

environment, sample bias or a development of awareness of wood properties between

the HP and post-HP occupations.

The charcoal results corroborate palaeoenvironmental interpretations provided by

seeds and macrofauna from Sibudu Cave. When the Sibudu Cave data are combined

with data from other sites it is apparent that, although conditions in the summer

rainfall region during the Last Glacial were generally dry, there is evidence for

localised variation in vegetation and climate.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/156
Date02 February 2006
CreatorsAllott, Lucy Fiona
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format80500 bytes, 56229 bytes, 2964175 bytes, 469597 bytes, 34742 bytes, 34762 bytes, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf

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