Klein Richard G, Avery Graham, Cruz-Uribe Kathryn, Steele Teresa E
Program in Human Biology, Stanford University, Building 80, Inner Quad, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2007 Feb;52(2):164-86. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.08.006. Epub 2006 Sep 1.
The Elandsfontein site, Western Cape Province, South Africa, is well known for an archaic hominin skullcap associated with later Acheulean artifacts. The site has also provided nearly 13,000 mammalian bones that can be identified to skeletal part and taxon. The assemblage derives from 49 species, 15 of which have no historic descendants. Comparisons to radiometrically dated faunas in eastern Africa indicate an age between 1 million and 600 thousand years ago. Unique features of the fauna, including the late occurrence of a dirk-toothed cat and a sivathere, may reflect its geographic origin in a region that was notable historically for its distinctive climate and high degree of biotic endemism. Together, taxonomic composition, geomorphic setting, and pollen extracted from coprolites indicate the proximity of a large marsh or pond, maintained by a higher water table. The small average size of the black-backed jackals implies relatively mild temperatures. The sum of the evidence places bone accumulation during one of the mid-Pleistocene interglacials that were longer and cooler than later ones, including the Holocene. The geomorphic context of the fauna presents no evidence for catastrophe, and most deaths probably resulted from attritional factors that disproportionately killed the young and old. However, only the dental-age profile of long-horned buffalo supports this directly. Field collection methods biased skeletal-part representation, but originally, it probably resembled the pattern in the younger, marsh-edge Acheulean occurrence at Duinefontein 2, 45 km to the south. Excavation there exposed multiple vertebral spreads, which probably mark carcasses from which hominins or large carnivores removed the meatier elements. Bone damage at both sites suggests that, despite abundant artifacts, hominins were much less important than carnivores in the bone accumulation. Together with limited observations from other sites, Elandsfontein and Duinefontein provisionally suggest that Acheulean-age hominins obtained few large mammals, whether by hunting or scavenging.
南非西开普省的埃兰兹方丹遗址因一个与晚期阿舍利文化器物相关的古人类头盖骨而闻名。该遗址还出土了近13000块哺乳动物骨骼,这些骨骼可以根据骨骼部位和分类单元进行鉴定。该组合来自49个物种,其中15种没有现存的历史后裔。与东非经放射性测年的动物群进行比较表明,其年代在100万年至60万年前之间。该动物群的独特特征,包括剑齿猫和西瓦兽的晚期出现,可能反映了其地理起源于一个历史上以独特气候和高度生物特有性而闻名的地区。分类组成、地貌环境以及从粪化石中提取的花粉共同表明,附近有一个由较高地下水位维持的大型沼泽或池塘。黑背胡狼的平均体型较小意味着当时的气温相对温和。所有证据表明,骨骼堆积发生在更新世中期的一次间冰期,这次间冰期比包括全新世在内的后期间冰期更长、更凉爽。动物群的地貌背景没有灾难的证据,大多数死亡可能是由损耗因素导致的,这些因素对幼崽和老年个体的杀伤力更大。然而,只有长角水牛的牙齿年龄特征直接支持这一点。野外采集方法使骨骼部位的代表性产生偏差,但最初,它可能类似于南部45公里处杜伊内方丹2号遗址较年轻的沼泽边缘阿舍利文化遗址中的模式。在那里的挖掘中发现了多个脊椎骨散布,这可能标记了人类或大型食肉动物从其身上取下了更肥美的部分的尸体。两个遗址的骨骼损伤表明,尽管有大量器物,但在骨骼堆积过程中,人类的重要性远低于食肉动物。结合其他遗址的有限观察结果,埃兰兹方丹和杜伊内方丹暂时表明,阿舍利文化时期的人类获得的大型哺乳动物很少,无论是通过狩猎还是 scavenging(此处scavenging未翻译,因为英文原文中scavenging未给出中文释义,可能是拼写有误,推测应为scavenging“ scavenging”意为“拾荒;觅食” ) 。