Goren-Inbar Naama, Sharon Gonen, Melamed Yoel, Kislev Mordechai
Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem 91905, Israel.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Feb 19;99(4):2455-60. doi: 10.1073/pnas.032570499.
The Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya'aqov (Israel) has revealed a unique association of edible nuts with pitted hammers and anvils. Located in the Dead Sea rift, on the boundary between the Arabian and African plates, the site dates to the Early-Middle Pleistocene, oxygen isotope stage 19. In a series of strata, seven species of nuts, most of which can be cracked open only by a hard hammer, were uncovered. Five of the species are extant terrestrial nuts, and two are aquatic nuts now extinct in the Levant. In addition, the site yielded an assemblage of pitted hammers and anvils similar in pit morphology to those used by chimpanzees and contemporary hunter-gatherers. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that a site has offered both paleobotanical and lithic evidence of plant foods eaten by early hominins and technologies used for processing these foods. The evidence also sheds light on the structure of the community: ethnographic analogies suggest that mixedgender groups may have been active on the shores of paleoLake Hula.
以色列的盖舍尔贝诺特亚科夫阿舍利遗址揭示了可食用坚果与凹坑石锤及砧石之间的独特关联。该遗址位于死海裂谷,处于阿拉伯板块和非洲板块的交界处,可追溯到早更新世至中更新世的氧同位素阶段19。在一系列地层中,发现了七种坚果,其中大多数只能用硬锤敲开。其中五种是现存的陆生坚果,两种是现已在黎凡特灭绝的水生坚果。此外,该遗址还出土了一批凹坑石锤和砧石,其凹坑形态与黑猩猩和当代狩猎采集者使用的类似。据我们所知,这是首次有遗址提供了早期人类食用的植物性食物的古植物学证据以及用于加工这些食物的技术的石器证据。这些证据还揭示了群落结构:人种学类比表明,男女混合群体可能在古胡拉湖岸边活动。