“…South Africa's southern coastal margin is a key region for the evolution and development of our species (Ambrose, 2002;Ambrose and Lorenz, 1990;Brown et al, 2012;Henshilwood et al, 2004a;Henshilwood et al, 2002;Marean, 2010;Powell et al, 2009). The southern Cape archaeological record has reframed the debate about the evolution of human behavior, providing early examples of engravings, ornaments, heat treatment of tool-stone and the focussed consumption of marine resources (Delagnes et al, 2016;Henshilwood et al, 2004b;Henshilwood et al, 2002;Henshilwood et al, 2014;Marean, 2014). The region also exhibits regular technological turnover through the last 100,000 years, with the intermittent production of bladelets, bifacial points and backed artefacts and the use of fine-grained rock, interspersed with periods lacking regular retouched flake forms and dominated by locally available rocks such as quartzite and quartz (Deacon, 1984;Wilkins et al, 2017).…”