2021
DOI: 10.1002/evan.21914
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Homo sapiensorigins and evolution in the Kalahari Basin, southern Africa

Abstract: The Kalahari Basin, southern Africa preserves a rich archeological record of human origins and evolution spanning the Early, Middle and Late Pleistocene. Since the 1930s, several stratified and dated archeological sites have been identified and investigated, together with numerous open‐air localities that provide landscape‐scale perspectives. However, next to recent discoveries from nearby coastal regions, the Kalahari Basin has remained peripheral to debates about the origins of Homo sapiens. Though the inter… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 143 publications
(292 reference statements)
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“…Rather than simply driving dispersal, dry and variable conditions may have facilitated adaptation, examined in an eastern African context by Grove (2016), where xerophytic dry environments are regarded as core landscapes for the MSA (Timbrell et al, 2022). In southern Africa, by contrast, dry conditions have been conceived to be an obstacle to innovation, and even to occupation, but this view is changing (Wilkins, 2020). Schoville et al (2022) argue, using evidence from the southern Kalahari margins, that behavioural plasticity, in the form of flexible foraging strategies, was a characteristic of MSA adaptation in the context of variable water availability and water stress.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rather than simply driving dispersal, dry and variable conditions may have facilitated adaptation, examined in an eastern African context by Grove (2016), where xerophytic dry environments are regarded as core landscapes for the MSA (Timbrell et al, 2022). In southern Africa, by contrast, dry conditions have been conceived to be an obstacle to innovation, and even to occupation, but this view is changing (Wilkins, 2020). Schoville et al (2022) argue, using evidence from the southern Kalahari margins, that behavioural plasticity, in the form of flexible foraging strategies, was a characteristic of MSA adaptation in the context of variable water availability and water stress.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Put simply, much of southern Africa's interior, especially the extensive Kalahari, has been regarded as a marginal area, perhaps uninhabited for long periods (Walker, 1998). As a result, the 'dominant narrative of H. sapiens origins being intrinsically tied to the coast and marine resources, with little or no contribution from the Kalahari Basin' (Wilkins, 2020:2) has emerged.…”
Section: The Empty Interior? Taphonomy and The Value Of Open-air Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The Kalahari Basin, in the interior of southern Africa, is a semi-arid region that has experienced significant climatic fluctuations with abundant records of both palaeoenvironment and archaeology. As such, this region provides a unique opportunity to further explore early human-environment interactions [ 15 ]. For example, in the southern Kalahari, multiple lines of evidence point to very different, much wetter periods during much of the Pleistocene [ 16 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies reveal significant complexities even at the intra-regional scale, however, due in part to the different types of proxies with variable resolutions and the variety of forcing factors at play [ 16 ]. They also reveal a complex relationship between palaeoenvironmental conditions and evidence for human occupation [ 15 , 28 ]. To more fully assess the response of Homo sapiens to changes in climate and environments, more well-dated records of past environments from different proxies, preferably closely associated with archaeological records of human behaviour, are required.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%