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A “marginality” model to explain major spatial and temporal gaps in the old and new world Pleistocene settlement records

✍ Scribed by Karl W. Butzer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
863 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
0883-6353

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✦ Synopsis


Department of Geography, The Uniuersity of Teras 01 Austin

A key argument currently invoked to cast skepticism on certain South American sites. that suggest a first peopling of the New World by ca. 35,000 B.P., is the perplexingly low visibility of the archaeological record until 12,000 B.P. But, contrary to a popular misconception, great spatial and temporal discontinuities are common in the Old World Paleolithic settlement record. In Southern Africa, carefully controlled archaeological stratigraphies show that the now semiarid interior was unoccupied for 50,000 and more years at a time. Episodes of widespread settlement in marginal environments were relatively brief, limited to periods of substantially wetter climate, and closely linked with moist habitats. A risk-minimization model is proposed to explain these dincontinuities. Plant and animal resources in the region, given a climate as dry or drier than today, were of low productivity and low reliability for unspeeialized hunter-gatherers during the dry seasons of poor years. This would require large foraging territories and very wide spacing of proximal bands, so that the exchange of vital information on temporary or migratory resources was minimal. Finally, during extended droughts. fatdepleted animals provided an unsatisfactory source of fwd. These variables suggest that environments with low productivity and predictability were too risky for unspeeialized hunter-gatherers with a pre-Upper Paleolithic technology, such as those who would have been able to enter the New World 35,000 B.P. Major spatial and temporal gaps in the New World settlement record should therefore be expected prior to the appearance of specialized Paleoindian hunter-gatherers ca. 12,000 B.P. Implications for geoarchaeological strategies are discussed.