Examining the distribution of Middle Paleolithic Nubian cores relative to chert quality in southern (Nejd, Dhofar) and south‐central (Duqm, Al Wusta) Oman

Author:

Eren Metin I.12ORCID,Bebber Michelle R.1,Singer David3,Pearson Chloe3,Ortiz Joseph D.3,Buchanan Briggs4,Beshkani Amir5,Chlachula Dominik6,Dellmour Rudolf7,Garba Roman89,Marks Anthony E.10,Usyk Vitaly611,Rose Jeffrey I.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology Kent State University Kent Ohio USA

2. Department of Archaeology Cleveland Museum of Natural History Cleveland Ohio USA

3. Department of Earth Sciences Kent State University Kent Ohio USA

4. Department of Anthropology University of Tulsa Tulsa Oklahoma USA

5. UMR 7194, Département Homme et Environnement Musée de l'Homme Paris France

6. Institute of Archaeology Brno, Czech Academy of Sciences Brno Czechia

7. Austrian Geological Society Wien Austria

8. Institute of Archaeology Prague, Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czechia

9. Nuclear Physics Institute, Czech Academy of Sciences Řež Czechia

10. Department of Anthropology Southern Methodist University Dallas Texas USA

11. Institute of Archaeology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Kyiv Ukraine

12. Interdisciplinary Centre for Archaeology and Evolution of Human Behaviour Universidade do Algarve Faro Portugal

Abstract

AbstractLithic raw material properties are often invoked to explain the presence, absence, form, or ontogeny of Paleolithic stone tools. Here, we explore whether the frequency of the Middle Paleolithic Nubian core form and core‐reduction systems co‐varies with toolstone quality in two neighboring regions in Oman: the southern region of Nejd, Dhofar, and the south‐central region of Duqm, Al Wusta. Specifically, we predicted that if raw material differences were influencing the distribution of Nubian cores, the chert would be of higher quality in the southern region, where Nubian cores were frequent, and of lower quality in the south‐central region, where they were scarce. We tested this prediction by collecting 124 chert samples from 22 outcrops and then quantitatively assessed two geochemical variables that are widely thought to influence knapping: impurity amount and silica content. We also examined the mineralogical composition, and the crystallite size and lattice strain for quartz (crystalline α‐SiO2) of representative chert samples. Our results suggest that the cherts in the two regions are similar, which is not consistent with the hypothesis that lithic raw material quality contributed to Nubian core spatial distribution in Oman. We discuss potential alternative hypotheses to explain Nubian core geographic patterning, and provisionally suggest that the scarcity of Nubian cores in south‐central Oman may be due to a concomitant scarcity of toolmakers, given a lack of water availability.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference163 articles.

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3. The first evidence of Middle Palaeolithic Nubian technology in north‐central Oman;Beshkani A.;Antiquity,2017

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