The Faraoskop Event: a significant moment in the history of foraging in the Western Cape, South Africa?

Author:

Parkington John1,Loftus Emma2,Manhire Antony1,Webley Lita1

Affiliation:

1. University of Cape Town

2. Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Abstract

Abstract Here we make the case that the interment of twelve skeletons in a small Western Cape rock shelter should be viewed as a single event. We present evidence of the partially disarticulated, clearly overlapping arrangement of human remains and the radiocarbon dating results from the individuals that point to a hasty but coordinated burial at a critical moment in the prehistory of the Cape. The moment was marked by the earliest appearance of the pastoralist lifestyle in an area previously dominated by hunting and gathering (Sadr 2015). Because, as others show (Dlamini et al., this volume), these interments are associated with peri-mortem violence, the demonstration of contemporaneity and entanglement implies a rare occurrence of so many deaths at a time when conflict between pastoralists and hunter-gatherers in the area seems likely. In describing the circumstances of bone recovery, the positioning of body parts and the associated radiocarbon ages, we lay the platform for further micro-stratigraphic, biological, genetic and isotopic studies of the twelve individuals and some contemplation on the nature of the event.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference53 articles.

1. Alder, D. 1988. The Faraoskop Human Skeletal Remains. Unpublished Bsc. Med. Honours: Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Cape Town

2. Ambrose, SH and Norr, L. 1993. Experimental evidence for the relationship of the carbon isotope ratios of whole diet and dietary protein to those of bone collagen and carbonate. In Prehistoric human bone (pp. 1–37). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.

3. Anderson, GC. 1991. Andriesgrond Revisited: material culture, ideologies and social change. Unpublished Honours Thesis: Archaeology Department, University of Cape Town.

4. Lactase Persistence Alleles Reveal Partial East African Ancestry of Southern African Khoe Pastoralists;Breton G;Current Biology,2014

5. Current pretreatment methods for AMS radiocarbon dating at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit (ORAU);Brock F;Radiocarbon,2010

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