Pan-African Evolution Research Group, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Kahlaische Straße 10, 07745, Jena, Germany.
Department of Classics and Archaeology, University of Malta, Msida, Malta.
Sci Rep. 2021 Jan 11;11(1):70. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-79418-4.
The African Middle Stone Age (MSA, typically considered to span ca. 300-30 thousand years ago [ka]), represents our species' first and longest lasting cultural phase. Although the MSA to Later Stone Age (LSA) transition is known to have had a degree of spatial and temporal variability, recent studies have implied that in some regions, the MSA persisted well beyond 30 ka. Here we report two new sites in Senegal that date the end of the MSA to around 11 ka, the youngest yet documented MSA in Africa. This shows that this cultural phase persisted into the Holocene. These results highlight significant spatial and temporal cultural variability in the African Late Pleistocene, consistent with genomic and palaeoanthropological hypotheses that significant, long-standing inter-group cultural differences shaped the later stages of human evolution in Africa.
非洲中石器时代(MSA,通常被认为跨越约 30 万年至 3 万年前[ka])代表了我们物种的第一个也是持续时间最长的文化阶段。尽管 MSA 到晚期石器时代(LSA)的过渡具有一定的时空可变性,但最近的研究表明,在某些地区,MSA 持续的时间远远超过 3 万年。在这里,我们报告了塞内加尔的两个新遗址,它们将 MSA 的结束时间定在大约 11 千年前,这是迄今为止在非洲发现的最年轻的 MSA。这表明这种文化阶段持续到了全新世。这些结果突出了非洲更新世晚期在空间和时间上存在显著的文化变异性,与基因组和古人类学假说一致,即显著的、长期存在的群体间文化差异塑造了非洲后期人类进化的阶段。