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It is in the context of the Middle Stone Age (MSA) that characteristic modern human morphotypes and behaviours appeared. In this chapter, MSA technologies, subsistence and site maintenance behaviours and their cognitive and behavioural implications are discussed in broad terms. The earliest MSA stone tool technology already shows behavioural complexity, but current evidence also indicates that bone tools, pyrotechnology, ochre technology, jewellery and engraved objects – which are all conventional markers for complex and modern behaviours – only appear in notable quantities from marine isotope stage (MIS) 5 onwards (from 130 to 85 kyr BP), with a discernible surge in MIS 4. Two of the MSA aspects that remain largely obscure due to a lack of fine grained information, however, are the regional extent of bone and stone tool technologies and the degree to which climatic events and environmental factors shaped human evolution and behaviour.
Inferences drawn from the study of the variability in sets of stone artefacts are central to the debate on the emergence of modern behaviour in the Middle and Late Pleistocene in Africa. Some argue that the Middle Stone Age demonstrates little variability while others emphasise the clear temporal and regional patterning. These contrary perceptions result from using methodologies that highlight different aspects of the variability. How the methodologies influence the detection and interpretation of variability is discussed with reference to the Klasies River site. This artefact sequence has been assessed as reflecting typological and technological stasis with marked change in the sequence only recognisable in the Howieson's Poort sub-stage. The study reported here suggests that technological variables indicate that the MSA I, MSA II and Howieson's Poort represent distinct technological conventions or technocomplexes aimed at the production of different end-products. In the MSA I, a blade strategy dominates, in the MSA II a Levallois-like production strategy is inferred while the Howieson's Poort again represents a blade reduction strategy with a more extended chaîne opératoire than the other sub-stages. To clarify the differences between the MSA I and MSA II, univariate and multivariate statistical analyses of the continuous variables of the end-products, points and blades were undertaken. This confirmed and quantified that the MSA I can be distinguished from the MSA II in terms of technological characteristics. It is evident that the platform characteristics of the end-products are time-sensitive indicators of differences between the sub-stages. It is important that the changes in the sequence at Klasies River are correlated with other Middle Stone Age occurrences. It is only when regional patterning is clarified that the issue of modern behaviour can be addressed in terms of the variability in Middle Stone Age artefacts.
Résumé
La variabilité des assemblages lithiques est au coeur du débat sur l’émergence des comportements moderne au cours du Pléistocène moyen et supérieur en Afrique. Certains auteurs considèrent que le Middle Stone Age (MSA) se caractérise par une faible variabilité alors que d'autres identifient des différences diachroniques et régionales. Ces visions opposées sont la conséquence des méthodes d'analyse, chacune mettant en évidence certains aspects de la variabilité entre assemblages.
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