modified fossil man potpouri

Glenn Morton (grmorton@waymark.net)
Tue, 14 Apr 1998 20:36:10 -0500

I put most of this out on another list the other day but much will be of
interest to those here. I have modified the post so if you are on the other
list, there is some new information at the bottom that wasn't in the old note.

One of the hallmarks of mankind is his use of fire. No animal uses or controls
fire. Traditionally, mankind's use and control of fire was believed to have
only started only after 500,000 years BP. But starting in the 1980's
discoveries at Chesowanja, Kenya at Swartkrans, South Africa and other sites
started showing signs of the use of fire much earlier. Today I ran into the a
list of sites which show signs of fire in Gowlett (1993, p. 56). Using this as
a starting point, I started rumaging around on the internet and compiled the
following list of sites which show the use of fire.

Vertesszollos, Hungary 166,000- 250,000
Terra Amata, France 300,000- 375,000
Olorgesailie, Kenya 375,000- 460,000
l'Escale, France 450,000- 550,000
Zhoukoudian, China 450,000- 550,000
Gadeb,Ethiopia 1,125,000-1,200,000
Yuanmou, China 1,210,000-1,300,000
Karari, ? 1,375,000-1,460,000
Chesowanja, Kenya 1,375,000-1,460,000
Swarkrans, South Africa 1,000,000-1,600,000

At Chesowanja, Kenya, there is evidence of the control of fire in the form of a
hearth, built by those ancient men (John Scarry,
http://www.unc.edu/courses/anth100/acheulia.htm; C. K. Brain and A. Sillen,
1998, p. 464-465)

Why is this important? Because as Gowlett (1993, p. 57) says,

"If the use of fire goes back to the Lower Pleistocene (over 1 million
years), as seems likely, it can be argued that our ancestors had already
achieved a basically human character: but this view will be hotly debated for
some time to come."

and (Gowlett, 1993, p. 57)

"Why then is there hostility to the idea of early fire among some
archaeologists? One view is that fire use represents a considerable mental
advance over stone tool manufacture, and that it must therefore be expected at
a later stage. Holders of this opinion are unwilling to postulate the use of
fire at any time earlier than is actually proven. But it seems likely that
early humans beings who were skilled in stone tool manufacture and use would
have a similar familiarity with wood (although it is never preserved.)."

One other thing came out of my readings with Gowlett. In addition to the
evidence for mental advancement in the form of the control of fire, there is
evidence that I was unaware of for another Pre-one million year old hut.
Gowlett (1993, p. 58) states,

"Ethiopia has a major share of early sites for, in addition to Hadar, there
are other important sequences at Melka Konture, and Gadeb. Melka Konture has
a number of different levels ranging from Developed Oldowan through to Late
Acheulean. On one site, aged about 1.5 million years, there are indications
of a cleared area, probably lying within a wind-break, and the excavator, Jean
Chavaillon, suspects that fire was in use."

I started looking again for info on Melka Konture and was able to find only the
following from a web page, but what it says, says bundles about mankind's
abilities in that far off time.

C. R. Gibbs writes in "BLACK INVENTORS: from Africa to America Two Million
Years of Invention and Innovation",

" In the oldest Oldowan level (1.5 million years) at Melka Konture near
Addis Ababa, Jean Chavaillon recently came upon a similar structure. Right in
the middle of an inhabited area strewn with tools, he suddenly uncovered a
round surface about 2.5 meters in diameter, without any tools and raised about
a third of a meter above the surrounding level, with a trough or gutter some
1.8 meters long. A few heaps of stones again suggested the presence of post.
"The construction of dwellings is a revealing step forward. Blessed with a
beneficent climate, the predecessors of genus Homo, the Australopethicines,
either could not or saw no need to build shelters. In their East African
heartland, they had lived primarily in the open resting/settling along river
banks and under shady trees. In southern Africa, they had found and lived in
many caves.
"The building of shelters showed early man and woman taking an extra step
- going beyond what was available or just getting by. These ancient structures
remind us that early humans were evolving, faster, mentally than all of their
fellow creatures. They were learning from their experiences, slowly by trial
and error; and were making things better based on these experiences. They were
learning to conceive, to think and to materially advance the quality of the
lives they led." http://www.erols.com/tdpedu/blkintx.htm

This is not the only claim for a hut from prior to 1 million years ago. Mary
Leakey discovered the possible remains of a hut from even earlier at Olduvai
site DKI. Her son, Richard writes of that find (Leakey, 1989, p. 60-61)

"One of the most interesting but seldom recalled archaeological
traces is of a stone structure at site DK in the lowest strata at
Olduvai. This structure has been interpreted by my mother as the
site of a windbreak or simple hut, where stones were perhaps used
to support a series of branches. There are stones piled
unnaturally one upon another in small heaps, and these were found
in a roughly circular pattern with a diameter of some 12 feet
(3.6 m). In my view, this is certainly a 'man-made' structure
and is of quite special significance to our understanding of our
ancestors as far back as 1.8 Ma."

Here is a list of the reported remains of other human-bult huts made by
hominids other than anatomically modern humans.

Site age BP reference

Neanderthals
Arcy-sur-Cure 40,000 Gourhan,1989, p. 33
La Baume Peyrards 80,000 Freeman, 1995, p. 84-85
Gotte-du-Lazaret 150,000 Mellars, 1996, p. 281

H.erectus
Terra Amata 350-400,000 Leakey, 1981, p. 124
Bilzingsleben, German 3 huts 300-400,000 Mania and Mania 1994, p.124
Melka Konture 1,500,000 Gowlett, 1993, p. 58
Olduvai, DK1 1,800,000 Leakey, 1989, p. 60-61

One final evidence of modern behavior among at least the Neanderthals was the
practice of head-binding. I was reminded of it among by Gowlett's book. Some
modern cultures tie the heads of infants to boards in order to shape the skull
to some preconceived vision of beauty. Tattersall (1993, p.130) notes:

"There's also other possible evidence of 'modern' behavior
from Shanidar. A couple of crania from the site may have been
artificially deformed by binding the head when the individuals
were young, a practice otherwise unknown except among modern
people."

The flattening of the head was accomplished by binding the baby's head to a
board or series of boards. Native Americans in the Northwestern US flattened
the heads of freemen but not of slaves. In the SE US bags of sand were
sometimes used to alter the shape of the head.(Encylcopedia Brittanica 1982,
vol IV, p. 971)

Modern Upper Paleolithic-like tools have now been found in several sites
dated between 200 and 250,000 years ago. From a report of the
Paleoanthropology Society and the Society for American Archaeology in
Seattle this year comes the following:

"Sophisticated stone toolmaking of a type often considered to have arisen
around 40,000 years ago was practiced by predecessors of modern humans
living much earlier, a new study finds.
...
"Bar-Yosef and Liliane Meignen of hte Center for Archaeological Research
in Valbonne, France, examined a large collection of stone tools unearthed at
israel's hayonim Cave. The finds date to about 200,000 eyars ago. Makers
of the implements remain unknown, although they may have been an early form
of Homo sapiens, Bar-Yosef suggests.
"Most of the hayonim material consists of narrow, elongated blades
with sharpened points, according to Bar-Yosef and Meignen. similar stone
artifacts have been found at a pair of 250,000-year-old sites in Israel and
Africa. All of these blades contrast with less elaborate stone tools found
at many other sites from around the same time." ~Bruce Bowen, "Cutting-edge
Pursuits in Stone Age," Science News, April 11, 1998, p. 238

And in what is now the third study to confirm the oldest piece of art work,
the Golan Venus of which I have spoken several times, the article notes:

"Art and other symbolic behavior may also have emerged much earlier than
traditionally thought, reports April Nowell of the University of
Pennsylvanian in Philadelphia. Microscopic analyses conducted by Nowell and
Francesco d'Errico of the Institute of Quaternary Prehistory and Geology in
Talence, France, suggest that a stone tool created grooves delineating what
appears to be a woman's head, neck, and arms on a small rock from an israeli
site dating to about 250,000 years ago." ~Bruce Bowen, "Cutting-edge
Pursuits in Stone Age," Science News, April 11, 1998, p. 238

While I know that there are several people on this list who don't want to
believe that this is a piece of art, it seems that the anthropological
community is beginning to reach consensus that it is. I know of only one
study that says it isn't art, and the author of that study never actually
laid eyes on the object.

in a quite 'human' fashion.

REFERENCES

Brain, C. K., and A. Sillen, "Evidence from the Swartkrans cave for the
earliest use of fire," Nature, 336, Dece. 1, 1988, p. 464-465

Freeman, Leslie, "The Development of Human Culture," in Andrew Sherratt,
editor, Cambridge Encyclopedia of Archaeology, (New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1980)

Gowlett, ~John A. J., Ascent to Civilization, (New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc.
1993), p. 56

C. R. Gibbs, "Black Inventors", http://www.erols.com/tdpedu/blkintx.htm

Gourhan, Andre Leroi, The Hunters of Prehistory, transl. Claire Jacobson, (New
York: Atheneum,1989)

Leakey,Richard E., The Making of Mankind, (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1981)

Leakey, Richard, "Recent Fossil finds From East Africa," in J.R. Durant ed.
Human Origins, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989)

Mania, D. and U. Mania and E. Vlcek, "Latest Finds of Skull Remains
of Homo erectus from Bilzingsleben (Thruingia)", Naturwissenschaften,
81(1994), p. 123-127

Mellars, Paul C., The Neanderthal Legacy, (Princeton: University Press, 1996),
p. 281

Scarry, John http://www.unc.edu/courses/anth100/acheulia.htm

Tattersall, Ian, The Human Odyssey, (New York: Prentice
Hall, 1993)

glenn

Adam, Apes, and Anthropology: Finding the Soul of Fossil Man

and

Foundation, Fall and Flood
http://www.isource.net/~grmorton/dmd.htm