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Título

Inland human settlement in southern Arabia 55,000 years ago. New evidence from the Wadi Surdud Middle Paleolithic site complex, western Yemen

AutorDelagnes, Anne; Tribolo, Chantal; Bertran, Pascal; Brenet, Michel; Crassard, R.; Jaubert, Jacques; Khalidi, Lamya CSIC ORCID; Mercier, Norbert; Nomade, S.; Peigné, S.; Sitzia, Luca; Tournepiche, Jean-François; Al-Halibi, Mohammad; Al-Mosabi, Ahmad; Macchiarelli, Roberto
Palabras claveArabian Peninsula
Yemen
Wadi Surdud site complex
Middle Paleolithic
OSL dating
Lithic technology
Settlement dynamics
Fecha de publicación2012
EditorElsevier
CitaciónJournal of Human Evolution (63/3) : (2012) 452–474
ResumenThe recovery at Shi’bat Dihya 1 (SD1) of a dense Middle Paleolithic human occupation dated to 55 ka BP sheds new light on the role of the Arabian Peninsula at the time of the alleged expansion of modern humans out of Africa. SD1 is part of a complex of Middle Paleolithic sites cut by the Wadi Surdud and interstratified within an alluvial sedimentary basin in the foothills that connect the Yemeni highlands with the Tihama coastal plain. A number of environmental proxies indicate arid conditions throughout a sequence that extends between 63 and 42 ka BP. The lithic industry is geared toward the production of a variety of end products: blades, pointed blades, pointed flakes and Levallois-like flakes with long unmodified cutting edges, made from locally available rhyolite. The occasional exploitation of other local raw materials, that fulfill distinct complementary needs, highlights the multi-functional nature of the occupation. The slightly younger Shi’bat Dihya 2 (SD2) site is characterized by a less elaborate production of flakes, together with some elements (blades and pointed flakes) similar to those found at SD1, and may indicate a cultural continuity between the two sites. The technological behaviors of the SD1 toolmakers present similarities with those documented from a number of nearly contemporaneous assemblages from southern Arabia, the Levant, the Horn of Africa and North Africa. However, they do not directly conform to any of the techno-complexes typical of the late Middle Paleolithic or late Middle Stone Age from these regions. This period would have witnessed the development of local Middle Paleolithic traditions in the Arabian Peninsula, which suggests more complex settlement dynamics and possible population interactions than commonly inferred by the current models of modern human expansion out of Africa.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2012.03.008
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/98195
DOI10.1016/j.jhevol.2012.03.008
ISSN0047-2484
E-ISSN1095-8606
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