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Author Topic: A review of the Early Acheulian evidence from South Asia  (Read 987 times)
shenzhou
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« on: November 09, 2005, 03:37:52 PM »

While looking up 'Modern Human Origins, Evolution of Behavior in Later Pleistocene South Asia' I came across this article that I don't think has been posted here before:

Review of the Early Acheulian evidence from South Asia
Assemblage Issue 8, Parth R. Chauhan

Abstract
South Asia represents the easternmost geographical occurrence of typical Acheulian biface assemblages in spatial and temporal abundance. All Acheulian evidence from this region is found in a rich mosaic of diverse palaeoenvironmental, geographical, and landform contexts, highlighting the dynamic adaptive and behavioral strategies of South Asian hominins during the Pleistocene. These assemblages have been traditionally categorised as either Early or Late Acheulian, based primarily on the absence or presence of certain tool-types or evident techniques. The earliest Acheulian evidence in South Asia is represented by unique technological attributes such as the absence of the Levallois technique, a relatively low number of cleavers, and a higher presence of core-tools and choppers, when compared with the Late Acheulian. Recent excavations and associated dating efforts by investigators working in several parts of peninsular India have revealed that the Early Acheulian in South Asia may extend well beyond the Matuyama/Brunhes transition. However, the frequency of these early occurrences within the subcontinent is low, reasons for which are currently unknown. In contrast, there is a significant and marked intensification in hominin activity and land-use from the Middle Pleistocene and onwards. South Asian Acheulian tool-types are generally comparable in techno-morphology with similar assemblages known from other parts of the Old World and represent direct technological influence from Africa, where the earliest Acheulian sites are documented. This paper reviews the evidence for the Early Acheulian in South Asia and discusses the unique attributes that separate such assemblages from the Late Acheulian, generally found in younger geomorphological contexts.

Free full text: http://www.shef.ac.uk/assem/issue8/chauhan.html
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Jacques Cinq-Mars
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« Reply #1 on: November 09, 2005, 05:35:07 PM »

While looking up 'Modern Human Origins, Evolution of Behavior in Later Pleistocene South Asia' I came across this article that I don't think has been posted here before:

Review of the Early Acheulian evidence from South Asia
Assemblage Issue 8, Parth R. Chauhan
<snip>

Many thanks for bringing this up. I had missed it. I must say that I haven't had much time to do my usual journal monitoring over the last many weeks and it is nice to see a Palanth member picking up the slack. At any rate, the article certainly looks like a nice complement to what Chauhan had published earlier in Assemblage (see HERE).

Jacques

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