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Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2024

Alastair Key*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
*
Corresponding author: Alastair Key; Email: ak2389@cam.ac.uk
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Abstract

Traces of early hominin cultural dynamics are revealed through the spatial and temporal character of the archaeological record. In the European Lower Palaeolithic, biface occurrences provide insights into episodes of cultural loss, persistence and convergence during the Acheulean, the longest known prehistoric cultural phenomenon. Here, the cohesiveness of Europe’s Acheulean record is statistically assessed under multiple spatial scenarios. Repeated cycles of cultural loss are identified in northern Europe, while southern Europe is demonstrated to have a continuous record of Acheulean presence. These data support longstanding hypotheses concerning an absence of Acheulean populations in northern Europe during glacial periods – a result that should increasingly be applied with caution. In southern Europe, Iberia displays the loss of Acheulean cultural information between c. 850 and 500 thousand years ago, with the Italian peninsula potentially acting as a source population for its later reintroduction. When investigated at a continental-level there are no clear episodes of cultural loss. Current evidence therefore suggests that once Acheulean cultural information was introduced to Europe, it never wholly left.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0), which permits re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited.
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Figure 0

Table 1. All dated Acheulean sites in Europe ranked from the earliest to most recent

Figure 1

Figure 1. Location of each dated Acheulean site in Europe (white circles; reliability graded three to one), alongside a series of undated or poorly evidenced biface occurrences that are sometimes suggested to be Acheulean occurrences (red triangles). The latter are noted here due to being widely known, spatially remarkable (e.g. Piekary IV) or being of importance to the discipline in another way.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Temporal placement of archaeological sites in the European Acheulean record. The ‘peak of the European Acheulean’ is defined by the 25% and 75% quartiles across all site central dates.

Figure 3

Table 2. All significant results returned across all spatial scenarios and model versions

Figure 4

Figure 3. Two ‘braided stream’ interpretations of Acheulean presence in Europe based on the present results. (A) illustrates the current state-of-the-art interpretation, where glacial stages led to an absence of Acheulean populations in northern Europe. (B) portrays a revised interpretation where the dates of some northern European Acheulean sites are hypothetically altered to more strongly reflect their radiometric ages, and not MIS stage associations. This results in a continuous sequence of Acheulean presence in northern Europe after its first introduction, albeit with demographic dips during glacial stages. Note the role of Eurasia, and potentially Africa, in providing sources for the flow of new Acheulean cultural information.

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Author comment: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Professors Brook and Alroy,

<b>Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture

</b>

Please find attached the above titled manuscript for your consideration for publication in Cambridge Prisms: Extinction.

Here, I investigate the temporal cohesiveness of the Lower Palaeolithic archaeological record in Europe. Specifically, I investigate the Acheulean cultural phenomenon, the longest lived and most spatially widespread stone tool industry produced by our early ancestors.

Present in Europe for more than 700,000 years, there has long been debate concerning the presence and loss of Acheulean Palaeolithic culture across the continent. Here, few breaks in the archaeological record are identified, suggesting Acheulean cultural information to have only occasionally been regionally absent. Four absences appear linked to northern glacial cycles, while a fifth is observed in Iberia soon after the Acheulean’s introduction to Europe c. 880,000 years ago. This study represents the first to assess an exhaustive database of reliably dated European Acheulean sites in the pursuit of identifying cultural and demographic patterns during this pivotal point in the early colonisation of Europe. At a continental level, Acheulean cultural information appears to have constantly been present in Europe after its first introduction, demonstrating the importance of Acheulean technologies to hominin populations and its durability as a cultural phenomenon.

Many thanks for your consideration of this manuscript and I look forward to hearing you decision in due course.

Yours sincerely

Recommendation: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R0/PR2

Comments

Both reviewers were highly positive about your paper, and had only minor corrections to suggest. To these, I would add the following minor points also:

1. You discuss the gaps in the Acheulean record as ‘extinctions’ at several points, even if this culture was subsequently re-introduced (e.g. line 169). Putting aside the implied equivalency between the ecological and archaeological concept of ‘extinction’, if they can be considered equivalently then this is not the right term. Extirpation would be more appropriate. However, I would ultimately recommend not equating cultural with biological extinction.

2. Some minor typos: line 285 ‘realty’, lines 415, 423 capital P in palaeoclimatic not necessary, likewise B in Bauplan (line 493)

Decision: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R0/PR3

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R1/PR4

Comments

Dear Professors Brook and Alroy,

It was a pleasure to see such positive reviews returned for the manuscript. I have endeavored to respond and revise to all suggestions made by the Reviewers and the Editor, but in the few instances where I have been unable to do so a full explanation is provided below.

Many thanks again for processing the submission. I look forward to hearing your final decision in due course.

Yours sincerely,

Alastair Key

Handling Editor

Both reviewers were highly positive about your paper, and had only minor corrections to suggest. To these, I would add the following minor points also:

1. You discuss the gaps in the Acheulean record as ‘extinctions’ at several points, even if this culture was subsequently re-introduced (e.g. line 169). Putting aside the implied equivalency between the ecological and archaeological concept of ‘extinction’, if they can be considered equivalently then this is not the right term. Extirpation would be more appropriate. However, I would ultimately recommend not equating cultural with biological extinction.

<b>Response: </b>Biological evolutionary terminology is routinely used for analogous mechanisms in cultural evolutionary research (when applicable [e.g., drift mechanisms, but not genes]), so I have continued to do so within the present manuscript. However, the Editor’s suggestion to use extirpation is a valuable one, and other than in the title and conclusion (as ‘extinction’ will be much more familiar to archaeologists and it reinforces alignment with the journal) I have now used extirpation in the manuscript.

2. Some minor typos: line 285 ‘realty’, lines 415, 423 capital P in palaeoclimatic not necessary, likewise B in Bauplan (line 493)

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

Reviewer: 1

This is a well written paper that provides important results and novel insights into the temporal and spatial distribution of the Acheulian and some of the potential causes underlying trends in the available record. The discussion of the results is balanced with a good combination of measured reasoning and necessary caveats due to certain outstanding issues and inevitable data limitations, including the possibility that new dates may change things in small ways.

I strongly recommend publication. In fact, the manuscript could essentially be published as is, since I really have no substantive comments for modification.

<b>Response: </b>I’m pleased to see the reviewer thought the manuscript to be balanced and well written. It is wonderful to receive such a positive review.

My only noteworthy comment concerns lines 347-349. The author identifies that Acheulian assemblages only begin to disappear with the appearance of Middle Paleolithic industries, particularly Levallois technology. However, the issue of why this is the case is left hanging. As the author notes at the outset of the paper, a clear goal of archaeology is to understand the causal factors underlying changing temporal patterns, spatial patterns, and the form of the archaeological record. I wonder if more might be said on why Levallois industries replaced handaxes, especially since the latter were seemingly so widespread for such a long stretch of time?

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated. Information on why Levallois technologies may have replaced the Acheulean has now been included in the relevant location.

Reviewer: 2

1) The article’s contribution to the discipline

Paleodemographics and local extinctions are hard subjects to cover archaeologically in this period, which makes the research question and method of this paper very relevant. Challenges of the archaeological record makes identifying gaps in the record and possible disappearances of populations outermost important. This paper does this with an accurate understanding of the archaeological record and material.

The paper show its relevance to this journal by approaching questions of population processes, whether cultural information survived possible regional extinctions and reasons for this.

2) Academic rigour and accuracy

In general there is a good flow between the Method and Results sections, making the analysis both comprehensible and reliable for the reader. With the references to other uses of the methods and statistical tools applied, the method and application on the material appear solid and well thought-through. Through the whole paper, there is shown awareness of the challenges of the archaeological record for this period and is included as a factor in the method and the discussion. The reliability-grade given to the age determination of the sites is an example of this, and is important for the insecurities about the Early and Middle Pleistocene record.

Good scientific transparency with open access to the codes used for the analysis.

No notes on the references, they are referenced correctly and are relevant to the arguments/ points of views presented in the paper.

<b>Response: </b>The reviewers kind words are appreciated, and it is great to see they appreciate the value of this work.

One concern is the very broad use of “Acheulean culture” in the paper. It is used to represent technology, culture, tradition, populations, hominins, persistence etc. The term culture is very fluffy, so please be specific in what meaning, you put into it in this paper and state it in the beginning. Then a lot of confusement and imprecise formulations can be avoided.

- Line 164: “lineage of cultured information” l. 164. This definition is very clear.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated. Multiple changes have been made through the manuscript to more clearly define ‘Acheulean’, particularly in relation to populations of biological organisms. Changes have not been made every time the word ‘Acheulean’ is referred to, as understandably this occurs a lot, but at key points ‘Acheulean populations’, ‘Acheulean period’, and ‘Acheulean culture’ are clarified. In many other instances the word Acheulean is already clarified by use of ‘period’ and ‘culture’ after the word. It is worth noting that the Acheulean cultural phenomenon is already clearly defined in the introduction.

Specific comments

- Line 185: It is not clear what S stands for, before reading further down. Maybe mention it already hear, so there is no confusion.

<b>Response: </b>This line of text is only a few lines before S is made clear, so I do not think this is an essential revision and the revision would lead to it being stated twice.

- Line 186: What is the function of the small box/square between “a” and “distribution”?

<b>Response: </b>The formulaic expression of the surprise test is outlined in brief here and repeated and clear reference to Solow and Smith (2005) where is it outlined in detailed is made. I do not necessarily agree it is necessary to expand on the information beyond that covered here and elsewhere (e.g., Roberts et al., 2023). Largely this stems from the fact that the inclusion of formulae-heavy text can be off-putting to the methods/results/paper’s re-use in a discipline (i.e. archaeology) where many colleagues are not familiar with such modelling approaches.

- Line 216-217: “ Sites or archaeological layers described as Acheulean but also displaying prepared core technologies were excluded”. Why, isn’t the surprise test about looking into out-layers or special cases? Surely there is a good reason for this, so it would be beneficial with just a one-line explanation.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated. This has now been clarified.

Table and figures:

Table 1 - Nice and easy to understand. Maybe quick explanation of the ranking, oldest to the youngest site presumely.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed, but the table caption already includes this information in its first sentence.

Table 2 - Good overview of the gaps, dates, analytical process and results. Maybe highlight the confirmed “inferred Acheulean inferred” rows with colour, to emphasise the results useful for further interpretation. One uncertainty: Only in Iberia the “model version” is Resamp. Maybe mention what this means compared to the others, especially when it confirms the presence of a gap.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

Figure 1 - Good with a map of the sites included and the division between secure and questionable dating. But the map appear a bit crowded with the site-names. Maybe it could be an advantage to apply numbers to the sites on the map, and then link the numbers to the site in the figure text.

<b>Response: </b>It is great to hear the reviewer’s kind words regarding the figure, but I have chosen to keep the names on the map. It is a little crowded in three areas, but in my view it makes the identification of sites much clearer compared to the use of numbers and subsequent reference to what would be a very long figure caption with site names. Further, even the use of numbers will appear crowded in some areas (particularly Britain).

Figure 2 - The violin plot is a good choice for this illustration and appear well connected with the sites on the right. Easy to understand.

Figure 3 - Very illustrative and makes the results and usage of the analysis very clear.

<b>Response: </b>The reviewer’s kind words are appreciated.

3) Style and structure

The structure for the paper in total is good, and makes the aim, method, process of analysis, results and its use for archaeological interpretation stand out as strong and convincing. The language is good, precise and easy to follow.

The abstract gives a good overview of the content of the paper. Maybe the Surprise test could be mentioned more explicitly, since the paper weights the methodological part quite heavily.

The first section 1. Introduction present the period, state of the archaeological record, state-of-the-art of the Acheulean technocomplex and introduction to the method well. The aim of the paper is formulated clearly and demonstrate its relevance for the field of research and for the journal.

Only one comment, which is a suggestion to switch the two small sections of line 67-76 and line 78-86, so the explanation of the Acheulean phenomenon comes before its chronology. But this is just a minor suggestion.

<b>Response: </b> I appreciate the reviewer’s suggestion, but I am happy with the sequence of the text at this portion of the introduction and feel the suggested change would not clarify anything to the reader, and as the reviewer notes it is only a minor suggestion.

The section 2. Methods provides a good overall explanation of the method, and makes it easy for the reader to understand the process of analysis step by step. Yet further explanation of potential errors connected to the methodological choices could be added.

<b>Response: </b>I agree it is always important to note potential methodological pitfalls regarding modelling efforts, but I would argue all important information have already been included and great care was taken to highlight potential issues. The reviewer does not suggest any specific changes, so it is unclear what else could need to be added.

Another suggestion is to put more emphasis on the null hypothesis, since this is an important part of understanding both the foundation of the test and the results (confirmation/ rejection the scenarios S1-S5). This would make it easier to follow the further explanation of the surprise test in section 2.1 of the actual surprise test of the paper.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

A suggestion: Create a table to display the scenarios listed from line 253-279. This would both help with an overview of similarities/ differences between the scenarios and saving characters from the text.

<b>Response: </b>Given there are only five scenarios, and these are clearly outlined in their own bullet points, I would not lean towards the inclusion of an additional table for this information (i.e., repetition).

Section 3. Results presents the results in a way that is easy to follow. An important thing to remark is how the results of the tests are held against the reliability of the dating techniques. Considering the influence of different qualities of dating methods and context, show great insight into the record and scientific responsibility for taking it into account.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated. New text expanding on this point has now been included in the results.

Generally the structure of 4. Discussion works well. Moving first from regional analyses and upwards to a general discussion on the Acheulean persistence in Europe works well and gives the reader a good overview of the dynamics at multiple levels.

The conclusion works as a nice wrap up, summary, and bring up relevant points from the core of the paper: the archaeological record and how it should be treated in investigations.

<b>Response: </b>The Reviewer’s kind words regarding the manuscript are appreciated.

Specific comments:

- Line 301-303: Add reference for the studies you are referring to.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 371: Barranc de la BoellA

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 375-378: Maybe add that these are “suggested”/“possible” explanations that have been made.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 380: … but habitatS suitable for…

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 393-396: A thing that could be considered here, is whether some of the sites excluded from the test, could contribute with something in this regard?

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 419-421: “… then the present results provide theoretically grounded empirical support in favour of these absences”. The theoretical background to the Surprise test has not been presented, so it could be good to use a couple of lines to explain what this means - also to the results.

<b>Response: </b>I understand the reviewer’s suggestion, but I would lean away from including this given the length of additional text and the portion of the manuscript where this suggestion is located. This paper will be read by a generalized archaeology audience and at this portion of the text I believe it is beneficial to portray a clear archaeological message, with references to Solow and Smith (2005) providing further information for readers if required.

- Line 431: The sentence does make sense, but a lot of terms right after each other makes it a bit confusing.

<b>Response: </b>I appreciate this is a long sentence, but it does not strike me as being particularly unclear.

- Line 483-485: There is missing a reference on pressures from non-Acheulean populations, and risk of diseases, since these factors has not been mentioned previously in the paper.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed and updated.

- Line 533-436: Caution, this is a very strong/definit statement.

<b>Response: </b>Agreed. The phrasing has now been slightly modified.

Recommendation: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R1/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Regional extinction(s) but continental persistence in European Acheulean culture — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.