70,000 YEAR-OLD AFRICAN SETTLEMENT UNEARTHED
Article created on
Sunday, July 20, 2014
http://www.pasthorizonspr.com/index.php/archives/07/2014/70000-year-old-african-settlement-unearthed
During ongoing
excavations in northern Sudan, Polish archaeologists from the
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology in Poznań, have discovered
the remains of a settlement estimated to 70,000 years old. This find,
according to the researchers, seems to contradict the previously held
belief that the construction of permanent structures was associated
with the so-called Great Exodus from Africa and occupation of the
colder regions of Europe and Asia.
The site known as
Affad 23, is currently the only one recorded in the Nile Valley which
shows that early Homo sapiens built sizeable permanent
structures, and had adapted well to the wetland environment.
This new evidence
points to a much more advanced level of human development and
adaptation in Africa during the Middle Palaeolithic. Locating the
“village”
“Discoveries in
Affad are unique for the Middle Palaeolithic. Last season, we came
across a few traces of light wooden structures. However, during the
current research we were able to precisely locate the village and
identify additional utility areas: a large flint workshop,
and a space for cutting hunted animal carcasses, located at a
distance” – explained project director Dr. Marta
Osypińska.
The researchers are
also working on a list of animal species that these early humans
hunted. Despite the relatively simple flint tools produced using the
Levallois technique, these humans were able to hunt both
large, dangerous mammals such as hippos, elephants and buffalo,
as well as small, nimble monkeys and cane rats (large rodents that
inhabited the wetlands).
Palaeolithic
hunters
This year, the
researchers intended to precisely date the time period in which the
Palaeolithic hunters lived here, using optically stimulated
luminescence.
“At this stage we
know that the Middle Palaeolithic settlement episode in Affad
occurred at the end of the wet period, as indicated by environmental
data, including the list of hunted animal species. But in the distant
past of the land such ecological conditions occurred at least twice”
about 75 millennia and about 25 millennia ago. Determining the time
when people inhabited the river bank near today’s Affad is the most
important objective of our project “- said prehistory expert Piotr
Osypiński.
The Polish team is
working with scientists from Oxford Brookes University, who are
helping to analyse the geological history of the area. The results
will help determine climatic and environmental conditions that
prevailed in the Central Nile Valley during the late Pleistocene and
hope to identify factors that contributed to the excellent state of
preservation at the Affad 23site.
No comments:
Post a Comment