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Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape

This thesis investigates changing patterns of landscape use throughout the Earlier (ESA), Middle (MSA) and Later Stone Ages (LSA) in the Olifants River Valley in the Western Cape, South Africa. Stone Age surface assemblages are all too often neglected in favour of stratified, datable cave sequences,...

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Main Author: Hallinan, Emily Sarah
Other Authors: Parkington, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Archaeology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hallinan, Emily Sarah
author2 Parkington, John
author_browse Hallinan, Emily Sarah
Parkington, John
author_facet Parkington, John
Hallinan, Emily Sarah
author_sort Hallinan, Emily Sarah
collection Thesis
description This thesis investigates changing patterns of landscape use throughout the Earlier (ESA), Middle (MSA) and Later Stone Ages (LSA) in the Olifants River Valley in the Western Cape, South Africa. Stone Age surface assemblages are all too often neglected in favour of stratified, datable cave sequences, overlooking important insights into changing behavioural patterns at a broader scale. The Olifants River Valley offers the opportunity for integrating a rich surface lithic record with excavated rock shelter occupation dating from the LSA and extending back into the early part of the MSA. This thesis approaches Stone Age landscape use with reference to a hypothesis proposed by Hilary Deacon, framing the MSA within the context of earlier and later patterns of behaviour. Based on observations from sites across South Africa, Deacon described ESA landscape use as stenotopic, occupying a narrow ecological niche focused on permanent water sources, and LSA landscape use as eurytopic, making use of a much broader range of habitats but with a specific focus on rock shelters as domestic sites. Deacon suggested that the intervening MSA, in its later stages, shows a pattern that anticipated LSA landscape use, with an increasing emphasis on caves and a wider-ranging exploitation of resources across different environmental zones. Surface surveys were carried out in the Olifants River Valley, mapping temporally diagnostic artefacts and their association with different topographic features. In this thesis, I test Deacon's model and show that it can be applied to the study area, observing distinctive preferences for certain sites and raw materials, and approaching changes in patterns of artefact discard from a technological perspective.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:58.458Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Department of Archaeology
publisherStr Department of Archaeology
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6605 Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape Hallinan, Emily Sarah Parkington, John This thesis investigates changing patterns of landscape use throughout the Earlier (ESA), Middle (MSA) and Later Stone Ages (LSA) in the Olifants River Valley in the Western Cape, South Africa. Stone Age surface assemblages are all too often neglected in favour of stratified, datable cave sequences, overlooking important insights into changing behavioural patterns at a broader scale. The Olifants River Valley offers the opportunity for integrating a rich surface lithic record with excavated rock shelter occupation dating from the LSA and extending back into the early part of the MSA. This thesis approaches Stone Age landscape use with reference to a hypothesis proposed by Hilary Deacon, framing the MSA within the context of earlier and later patterns of behaviour. Based on observations from sites across South Africa, Deacon described ESA landscape use as stenotopic, occupying a narrow ecological niche focused on permanent water sources, and LSA landscape use as eurytopic, making use of a much broader range of habitats but with a specific focus on rock shelters as domestic sites. Deacon suggested that the intervening MSA, in its later stages, shows a pattern that anticipated LSA landscape use, with an increasing emphasis on caves and a wider-ranging exploitation of resources across different environmental zones. Surface surveys were carried out in the Olifants River Valley, mapping temporally diagnostic artefacts and their association with different topographic features. In this thesis, I test Deacon's model and show that it can be applied to the study area, observing distinctive preferences for certain sites and raw materials, and approaching changes in patterns of artefact discard from a technological perspective. 2014-08-20T14:31:27Z 2014-08-20T14:31:27Z 2013 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6605 eng application/pdf Department of Archaeology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Hallinan, Emily Sarah
Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
title_full Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
title_fullStr Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
title_short Stone age landscape use in the Olifants River Valley, Western Cape
title_sort stone age landscape use in the olifants river valley western cape
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6605
work_keys_str_mv AT hallinanemilysarah stoneagelandscapeuseintheolifantsrivervalleywesterncape