Département Homme Et Environnement, UMR 7194, Muséum National D'Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne Université, Musée de L'Homme, 17 Place du Trocadéro, 75016, Paris, France.
National Museum of the Philippines, Padre Burgos St., 1000, Manila, The Philippines.
Sci Rep. 2020 Jul 6;10(1):11081. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-68066-3.
The recently described site of Kalinga in the Philippines adds to our understanding of Early-Middle Pleistocene hominin behaviour. Yet, disentangling the natural from the anthropogenic modifications that have taken place in such an old archaeological site is challenging. In this paper we use a set of taphonomic tools at hand to rectify the distortion made by natural processes during the formation of the Kalinga site. From the description of the ribs completeness, surface damages and scattering in the excavation, one can reconstruct the butchery, transport and deposition sequence of the rhino carcass and its post-depositional disturbances and diagenetic evolution of the site. We conclude that the rhino and the stone artefacts potentially used to deflesh the carcass were transported by a mudflow from its butchery place over a few meters only and got stuck and mixed with an older faunal assemblage that was transported by a small stream.
在菲律宾最近描述的卡林加遗址,使我们对中更新世早期人类行为有了更多的了解。然而,要理清在这样一个古老的考古遗址中发生的自然和人为改造之间的区别具有挑战性。在本文中,我们使用了一组手头的埋藏学工具来纠正卡林加遗址形成过程中自然过程造成的扭曲。从肋骨完整度、表面损伤和挖掘中的散布情况的描述中,可以重建犀牛尸体的屠宰、运输和沉积顺序,以及遗址的后沉积干扰和成岩演化。我们的结论是,犀牛和可能用于分解尸体的石器是由泥石流从屠宰场仅几米远的地方运输而来,然后与一小股溪流搬运而来的更古老的动物群混合并卡住。