Department of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut.
Evol Anthropol. 2019 Sep;28(5):267-282. doi: 10.1002/evan.21802.
The Middle to Later Stone Age (MSA/LSA) transition is a prominent feature of the African archeological record that began in some places ~30,000-60,000 years ago, historically associated with the origin and/or dispersal of "modern" humans. Unlike the analogous Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition in Eurasia and associated Neanderthal extinction, the African MSA/LSA record remains poorly documented, with its potential role in explaining changes in the behavioral diversity and geographic range of Homo sapiens largely unexplored. I review archeological and biogeographic data from East Africa, show regionally diverse pathways to the MSA/LSA transition, and emphasize the need for analytical approaches that document potential ancestor-descendent relationships visible in the archeological record, needed to assess independent invention, population interaction, dispersal, and other potential mechanisms for behavioral change. Diversity within East Africa underscores the need for regional, rather than continental-scale narratives of the later evolutionary history of H. sapiens.
中石器时代/晚石器时代(MSA/LSA)过渡是非洲考古记录中的一个显著特征,始于约 3 万至 6 万年前,历史上与“现代”人类的起源和/或扩散有关。与欧亚大陆类似的中石器时代/旧石器时代过渡以及相关的尼安德特人灭绝不同,非洲 MSA/LSA 记录的记录仍不完善,其在解释智人行为多样性和地理范围变化方面的潜在作用在很大程度上尚未得到探索。我回顾了来自东非的考古学和生物地理学数据,展示了 MSA/LSA 过渡的区域多样化途径,并强调需要采用分析方法来记录考古记录中可见的潜在祖先-后代关系,这对于评估独立发明、人口互动、扩散和其他潜在的行为变化机制是必要的。东非内部的多样性强调了需要对智人后期进化史进行区域而不是大陆范围的叙述。