SOUTHERN AFRICA AND MODERN HUMAN ORIGINS

被引:65
|
作者
DEACON, HJ
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1098/rstb.1992.0095
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
This paper argues that southern Africa was a remote part of the Old World in the late Pleistocene (125-10 ka ago). Because of this isolated position there was continuity without significant replacement in the resident population. Isolation and the relatively recent spread of agriculture to the region has allowed a section of this population to survive into the present. They are the Bushmen (San). Studies of geographic patterning in conventional genetic markers and mitochrondrial DNA indicate that the Bushman clade has a long evolutionary history in southern Africa. Estimates of more than 100 ka for the continued presence of this population in the region are supported in archaeological investigations of sites with long sequences such as Klasies River main site and Border Cave. Human remains dating to the earlier part of the late Pleistocene have been recovered from these sites and the samples form a morphological series with the Klasies River remains possibly 20 ka older than those from Border Cave. There is no fossil record for the later Pleistocene, however, at a period when selection for a gracile morphology may have been pronounced. The cultural associations in the earlier late Pleistocene are with the Middle Stone Age. Expressions of cultural 'style' and the occurrence of similar artefact design types in the Middle and Later Stone Ages can be interpreted with reference to the ethnographic present. Temporal continuity can be shown in the geographical distribution of stylistic markers and this suggests participation in a shared cognitive system. The inference is that the people in the earlier late Pleistocene had cognitive abilities that are comparable to those shown by their Holocene and modern descendants. The presence of the ancestors of a modern population in the earlier late Pleistocene in this region is perhaps expected if modern people had their origins in Africa.
引用
收藏
页码:177 / 183
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Dispersals Out of Africa and Back to Africa: Modern origins in North Africa
    Garcea, Elena A. A.
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2016, 408 : 79 - 89
  • [22] MAPELA, MAPUNGUBWE AND THE ORIGINS OF STATES IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
    Huffman, Thomas N.
    SOUTH AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2015, 70 (201): : 15 - 27
  • [23] BROEDERSTROOM AND THE ORIGINS OF CATTLE - KEEPING IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
    HUFFMAN, TN
    AFRICAN STUDIES, 1990, 49 (02) : 1 - 12
  • [24] SOUTHERN AFRICA FACES MODERN WORLD
    DELIUS, A
    AFRICAN AFFAIRS, 1973, 72 (289) : 430 - 437
  • [25] Human origins: Out of Africa
    Tattersall, Ian
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2009, 106 (38) : 16018 - 16021
  • [26] Origins of modern human behavior
    Bianchi, RS
    ARCHAEOLOGY, 1995, 48 (06) : 27 - &
  • [27] LANGUAGE AND MODERN HUMAN ORIGINS
    SCHEPARTZ, LA
    YEARBOOK OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, VOL 36 1993, 1993, 36 : 91 - 126
  • [28] SYMBOLISM AND MODERN HUMAN ORIGINS
    LINDLY, JM
    CLARK, GA
    CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, 1990, 31 (03) : 233 - 261
  • [29] Modern human origins backdated
    Günter Bräuer
    Yuji Yokoyama
    Christophe Falguères
    Emma Mbua
    Nature, 1997, 386 : 337 - 338
  • [30] Origins of modern human ancestry
    Bergstrom, Anders
    Stringer, Chris
    Hajdinjak, Mateja
    Scerri, Eleanor M. L.
    Skoglund, Pontus
    NATURE, 2021, 590 (7845) : 229 - 237