A method for dating ostrich eggshells in a Middle Stone Age shell midden reveals a more intensely settled and older site than previously known. The stratified layers of shell middens formed from cast-off mussel and limpet shells and other artifacts can offer a window into early cultures. However, radiocarbon dating is accurate to only around 50,000 years. Elizabeth M. Niespolo and colleagues report a method for dating ostrich eggshells in a Middle Stone Age shell midden and reveal an older site than previously known. The authors explored a method to precisely date older shell middens and thus allow comparisons among midden sites using debris from a common food source. The authors analyzed 17 eggshell samples from five strata of a midden at Ysterfontein 1, a collapsed rock shelter on the western coast of South Africa. Next, the authors measured the concentration of uranium and thorium, accounted for the secondary uptake of uranium upon burial, and estimated that the midden was formed 119,900- 113,100 years ago. Analysis of stable carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen isotopes within the eggshells offered insight into the paleoenvironment, indicating a cooling and drying climate. According to the authors, the accumulation rates of debris within the midden are more akin to those from the Later Stone Age, indicating that humans were intensively foraging marine resources.
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Article #20-20042:
"Early, intensive marine resource exploitation by Middle Stone Age humans at Ysterfontein 1 rockshelter, South Africa," by Elizabeth M. Niespolo, Warren D. Sharp, Graham Avery, and Todd E. Dawson
MEDIA CONTACT:
Elizabeth M. Niespolo,
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA;
email: <niespolo@caltech.edu>