Taphonomic and technological analyses of Lower Palaeolithic bone tools from Clacton-on-Sea, UK

Author:

Parfitt Simon A.,Lewis Mark D.,Bello Silvia M.

Abstract

AbstractThe exceptional survival of Middle Pleistocene wooden spears at Schöningen (Germany) and Clacton-on-Sea (UK) provides tantalizing evidence for the widespread use of organic raw materials by early humans. At Clacton, less well-known organic artefacts include modified bones that were identified by the Abbé Henri Breuil in the 1920s. Some of these pieces were described and figured by Hazzledine Warren in his classic 1951 paper on the flint industry from the Clacton Channel, but they have been either overlooked in subsequent studies or dismissed as the product of natural damage. We provide the first detailed analysis of two Clactonian bone tools found by Warren and a previously unrecognized example recovered in 1934 during excavations directed by Mary Leakey. Microscopic examination of percussion damage suggests the bones were used as knapping hammers to shape or resharpen flake tools. Early Palaeolithic bone tools are exceedingly rare, and the Clacton examples are the earliest known organic knapping hammers associated with a core-and-flake (Mode 1) lithic technology. The use of soft hammers for knapping challenges the consensus that Clactonian flintknapping was undertaken solely with hard hammerstones, thus removing a major technological and behavioural difference used to distinguish the Clactonian from late Acheulean handaxe (Mode 2) industries.

Funder

Calleva Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference95 articles.

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3. McNabb, J. The Clactonian: British Lower Palaeolithic Flint Technology in Biface and Non-Biface Assemblages. (PhD thesis, University of London, 1992).

4. McNabb, J. Problems and pitfalls in understanding the Clactonian. In Culture History and Convergent Evolution: Can we Detect Populations in Prehistory? (ed. Groucutt, H.) 29–53 (Springer, 2020).

5. Wenban-Smith, F. F. Clactonian and Acheulian industries in Britain; their chronology and significance reconsidered. In Stone Age Archaeology. Essays in Honour of John Wymer (eds Ashton, N. et al.) 90–97 (Oxbow Books, 1998).

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