Brain enlargement, reduction in molar tooth size, increased stature and other features of early Homo did not evolve in a vacuum. These evolutionary changes refl ect shifts in a complex web of relationships among their populations, between early Homo and other hominin species, and between their biotic community and abiotic forces (i.e., climate change). Archeological evidence complements and balances inferences from hominin fossil remains, non-hominin vertebrate paleontology, geology, and other component fi elds of paleoan-thropology. This paper represents an attempt to pull together the various strands of its authors' expertise to shed light on the origins and adaptations of early Homo. It is not intended to be a comprehensive review of Oldowan sites, their chronology, lithic typology, paleontological associations, and interpretive issues. For recent overviews of these subjects, see Plummer (2004), Schick and Toth (2006) as well as papers in Toth and Schick (2006), Ungar (2007) and Hovers and Braun (2009). The coincidence of knapped stone tools, butchery-marked bones and fossil remains of early Homo is usually linked to increased hominin carnivory. This paper reviews evidence for this hypothesis, and considers alternative hypotheses as well.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Aiello, L.C., Wheeler, P., 1995. The expensive-tissue hypothesis: the brain and digestive system in human and primate evolution. Current Anthropology 36, 199–221.
Antón, S., Swisher, C.C., 2004. Early dispersals of Homo from Africa. Annual Review of Anthropology 33, 271–296.
Asfaw, B., White, T., Lovejoy, O., Latimer, B., Simpson, S., Suwa, G., 1999. Australopithecus garhi: a new species of early hominid from Ethiopia. Science 284, 629–635.
Bar-Yosef, O., Goren-Inbar, N., 1993. The Lithic Assemblages of 'Ubeidiya. Hebrew University Institute of Archaeology, Jerusalem.
Blumenschine, R.J., 1987. Characteristics of an early hominid scavenging niche. Current Anthropology 28, 383–407.
Blumenschine, R.J., 1995. Percussion marks, tooth marks, and experimental determinations of the timing of hominid and carnivore access to long bones at FLK Zinjanthropus, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Journal of Human Evolution 29, 21–51.
Blumenschine, R.J., Peters, C.R., 1998. Archaeological predictions for hominid land use in the paleo-Olduvai Basin, Tanzania, during lowermost Bed II times. Journal of Human Evolution 34, 565–607.
Blumenschine, R.J., Pobiner, B.L., 2007. Zooarchaeology and the ecology of early hominin carnivory. In: Ungar, P. (Ed.), Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 167–190.
Blumenschine, R.J., Selvaggio, M.M., 1988. Percussion marks on bone surfaces as a new diagnostic of hominid behavior. Nature 333, 763–765.
Blumenschine, R.J., Peters, C.R., Masao, F.T., Clarke, R.J., Deino, A.L., Hay, R.L., Swisher, C.C., Stanistreet, I.G., Ashley, G.M., McHenry, L.J., Sikes, N.E., van der Merwe, N.J., Tactikos, J.C., Cushing, A.E., Deocampo, D.M., Njau, J.K.,Ebert, J.I., 2003. Late Pliocene Homo and hominid land use from western Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Science 299, 1217–1221.
Blumenschine, R.J., Peters, C.R., Capaldo, S.D., Andrews, P., Njau, J.K., Pobiner, B.L., 2007a. Vertebrate taphonomic perspectives on Oldowan hominin land use in the Plio-Pleistocene Olduvai Basin, Tanzania. In: Pickering, T.R., Toth, N., Schick, K, (Eds.), Breathing Life into Fossils: Taphonomic Studies in Honor of C.K. (Bob) Brain. Stone Age Institute Press, Gosport, Indiana, pp. 161–179.
Blumenschine, R.J., Prassack, K.A., Kreger, C.D., Pante, M.C., 2007b. Carnivore tooth marking, microbial bioerosion, and the invalidation of Domínguez-Rodrigo and Barba's (2006) test of Oldowan hominin scavenging behavior. Journal of Human Evolution 53, 420–426.
Blumenschine, R.J., Masao, F., Tactikos, J., Ebert, J., 2008. Effects of distance from stone source on landscape-scale variation in Oldowan artifact assemblages in the Paleo-Olduvai Basin, Tanzania. Journal of Archaeological Science, 35, 76–86.
Boesch, C., Boesch, H., 1984. Mental map in wild chimpanzees: an analysis of hammer transports for nut cracking. Primates 25, 160–170.
Brain, C.K., Shipman, P., 1993. The Swartkrans Bone Tools. Transvaal Museum Monograph 8, Transvaal Museum, Pretoria.
Bramble, D.M., Lieberman, D.E., 2004. Endurance running and the evolution of Homo. Nature 432, 354–352.
Braun, D.R., Plummer, T.W., Ditchfield, P.W., Bishop, L.C., Ferraro, J.V., 2009. Oldowan technology and raw material variability at Kanjera South. In: Hovers, E., Braun, D. (Eds.), Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Oldowan. Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 99–110.
Bunn, H.T., 1981. Archaeological evidence for meat-eating by Plio-Pleistocene hominids from Koobi Fora and Olduvai Gorge. Nature 291, 574–577.
Bunn, H.T., 1982. Meat-eating and human evolution: studies of the diet and subsistence patterns of Plio-Pleistocene hominids. Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.
Bunn, H.T., 1997. The bone assemblages from the excavated sites. In: Isaac, G., Isaac, assisted by Isaac, B. (Eds.), Koobi Fora Research Project, Volume 5. Plio-Pleistocene Archaeology. Clarendon, Oxford, pp. 402–458.
Bunn, H.T., 2001. Hunting, power scavenging, and butchery by Hadza foragers and by Plio-Pleistocene Homo. In: Stanford, C.B., Bunn, H.T. (Eds.), Meat Eating and Human Evolution. Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 199–218.
Bunn, H.T., 2007. Meat made us human. In: Ungar, P.S. (Ed.), Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 191–211.
Bunn, H.T., Kroll, E.M., 1986. Systematic butchery by Plio/Pleistocene hominids at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Current Anthropology 27, 431–452.
Capaldo, S., 1997. Experimental determinations of carcass processing by Plio-pleistocene hominids and carnivores at FLK 22 (Zinjanthropus), Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Journal of Human Evolution 33, 555–597.
Cavallo, J.A., Blumenschine, R.J., 1989. Tree-stored leopard kills: expanding the hominid scavenging niche. Journal of Human Evolution 18, 393–399.
Cerling, T.E., Harris, J.M., Leakey, M.G., 1999. Browsing and grazing in elephants: the isotope record of modern and fossil proboscideans. Oecologia 120, 364–374.
Cerling, T.E., Harris, J.M., Passey, B.H., 2003. Diets of East African bovids based on stable isotope analysis. Journal of Mammalogy 84, 456–470.
Clark, J.D., 2001. Modifi ed, used and other wood and plant specimens fro Bwalya Industry Acheulean horizons. In: Clark, J.D. (Ed.), Kalambo Falls Prehistoric Site, Volume III, The Earlier Cultures: Middle and Earlier Stone Age. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 481–491.
Crabtree, D.E., Davis, E.L., 1968. Experimental manufacture of wooden implements with tools of fl aked stone. Science 159, 426–428.
d'Errico, F., Backwell, L., 2003. Possible evidence of bone tool shaping by Swartkrans early hominids. Journal of Archaeological Science 30, 1559–1576.
de Heinzelin, J., Clark, D., White, T., Hart, W., Renne, P., WoldeGabriel, G., Beyene, Y.,Vrba, E., 1999. Environment and behavior of 2.5-million-year-old Bouri hominids. Science 284, 625–629.
Delagnes, A., Roche, H., 2005. Late Pliocene hominid knapping skills: the case of Lokalalei 2C, West Turkana, Kenya. Journal of Human Evolution 48, 435–472.
de la Torre, I., 2004. Omo revisited: evaluating the technological skills of Pliocene hominids. Current Anthropology 45, 439–467.
de la Torre, I., Mora, R., 2005. Unmodifi ed lithic material at Olduvai Bed I: manuports or ecofacts? Journal of Archaeological Science 32, 273–285.
Dennell, R., Roebroeks, W., 2005. An Asian perspective on early human dispersal from Africa. Nature 438, 1099–1104.
Domínguez-Rodrigo, M., 1997. Meat-eating by early hominids at the FLK 22 Zinjanthropus site, Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): an experimental approach using cut-mark data. Journal of Human Evolution 33, 669–690.
Domínguez-Rodrigo, M., Barba, R., 2006. New estimates of tooth mark and percussion mark frequencies at the FLK Zinj site: the carnivore-hominid-carnivore hypothesis falsifi ed. Journal of Human Evolution 50, 170–194.
Domínguez-Rodrigo, M., Serralonga, J., Juan-Tresserras, J., Alcala, L., Luque, L., 2001. Woodworking activities by early humans: a plant residue analysis on Acheulian stone tools from Peninj (Tanzania). Journal of Human Evolution 40, 289–299.
Domínguez-Rodrigo, M., Pickering, T.R., Semaw, S., Rogers, M.J., 2005. Cutmarked bones from Pliocene archaeological sites at Gona, Ethiopia: implications for the function of the world's oldest stone tools. Journal of Human Evolution 48, 109–121.
Foley, R.A., 2001. The evolutionary consequences of increased car-nivory in hominids. In: Stanford, C.B., Bunn, H.T. (Eds.), Meat Eating and Human Evolution. Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 305–331.
Gabunia, L., Antón, S.C., Lordkipanidze, D., Vekua, A., Justus, A., Swisher, C.C., 2001. Dmanisi and dispersal. Evolutionary Anthropology 10, 158–170.
Gilby, I.C., 2006. Meat sharing among the Gombe chimpanzees: harassment and reciprocal exchange. Animal Behaviour 71, 953–963.
Goldman, T., Hovers, E., 2009. Methodological issues in the study of Oldowan raw material selectivity: insights from A.L. 894 (Hadar, Ethiopia). In: Hovers, E., Braun, D. (Eds.), Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Oldowan. Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 71–89.
Goren-Inbar, N., Werker, E., Feibel, C.S. (Eds.), 2002. The Acheulian Site of Gesher Benot Ya'acov, Israel: The Wood Assemblage. Oxbow Books, Oxford.
Gould, R.A., Koster, D.A., Sontz, A., 1971. The lithic assemblage of the Western Desert Aborigines of Australia. American Antiquity 36, 149–168.
Guérin, C., Bar-Yosef, O., Debard, E., Faure, M., Shea, J., Tchernov, E., 2003. Oubeidiyeh, carrefour biogéographique et culturel entre l'Afrique et l'Eurasie au paléolithique ancien. In: Vandermeersch, B. (Ed.), Echanges et Diffusion dans la Préhistoire Méditerranéenne. Editions du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifi ques, Paris, pp. 131–146.
Harmand, S., 2004. Raw material and economic behaviour of late Pliocene hominids: the case of Lokalalei 2C and Lokalalei 1 sites, West Turkana (Kenya). Paper presented at the Paleoanthropological Society Annual Meeting, Montreal, Canada.
Harmand, S., 2005. Matières premières lithiques et comportements techno-économiques des homininés plio-pleistocènes. Ph.D. dissertation, Université Paris X-Nanterre.
Harmand, S., 2009a. Raw materials and techno-economic at Oldowan and Acheulean sites in the West Turkana region, Kenya. In: Blades, B. (Ed.), Lithic Materials and Palaeolithic Societies. Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 3–14.
Harmand, S., 2009b. Variability in raw material selectivity at the late Pliocene sites of Lokalalei, West Turkana, Kenya. In: Hovers, E., Braun, D. (Eds.), Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Oldowan. Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 85–98.
Harris, J.M., Cerling, T.E., 1999. Dietary adaptations of extant and Neogene African suids. Journal of Zoology, London 256, 45–54.
Harris, J.W.K., 1983. Cultural beginnings: Plio-Pleistocene archaeological occurrences from the Afar, Ethiopia. African Archaeological Review 1, 3–31.
Hay, R.L., 1976. The Geology of Olduvai Gorge: a Study of Sedimentation in a Semi-arid Basin. University of California Press, Berkeley.
Hill, K., Kaplan, H., 1993. On why male foragers hunt and share food. Current Anthropology 34, 701–706.
Hovers, E., 2001. Stone knapping in the Late Pliocene of Hadar, Ethiopia. Abstract of paper presented at: Knapping Stone: A Uniquely Human Behavior? web.mae.u-paris10.fr/knappingstone/participant.htm
Hovers, E., Schollmeyer, K., Goldman, T., Eck, G., Reed, K., Johanson, D., Kimbel, W., 2002. Late Pliocene archaeological sites in Hadar, Ethiopia. Journal of Human Evolution 42, A17.
Howell, F.C., Haesaerts, P., de Heinzelin, J., 1987. Depositional environments, archeological occurrences, and hominids from Members E and F of the Shungura Formation (Omo Basin, Ethiopia). Journal of Human Evolution 16, 665–700.
Inizan, M.-L., Reduron-Ballinger, M., Roche, H., Tixier, J., Féblot-Augustins, 1999. Technology and Terminology of Knapped Stone. Cercle de Recherches et d'Etudes Préhistoriques (CNRS), Meudon.
Isaac, G., Harris, J.W.K., 1997. Sites stratifi ed within the KBS Tuff: reports. In: Isaac, G. assisted by Isaac, B. (Eds.), Koobi Fora Research Project, Volume 5: Plio-Pleistocene Archaeology. Clarendon, Oxford, pp. 71–114.
Isaac, G., Harris, J.W.K., Kroll, E.M., 1997. The stone artefact assemblages: a comparative study. In: Isaac, G., assisted by Isaac, B. (Eds.), Koobi Fora Research Project, Volume 5: Plio-Pleistocene Archaeology. Clarendon, Oxford, pp. 262–362.
Isaac, G.L., 1978. The food sharing behavior of protohuman hominids. Scientifi c American 238, 90–109.
Jones, P.R., 1980. Experimental butchery with modern stone tools and its relevance for palaeolithic archaeology. World Archaeology 12, 153–165.
Jones, P.R., 1994. Results of experimental work in relation to the stone industries of Olduvai Gorge. In: Leakey, M.D., Roe, D.A. (Eds.), Olduvai Gorge, Volume 5: Excavations in Beds III, IV and the Masek Beds, 1968–1971. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 254–298.
Kaplan, H., Hill, K., 1985. Hunting ability and reproductive success among male Ache foragers: preliminary results. Current Anthropology 26, 131–133.
Kappelman, J., Plummer, T., Bishop, L., Duncan, A., Appleton, S., 1997. Bovids as indicators of paleoenvironments in East Africa. Journal of Human Evolution 32, 229–256.
Keeley, L.H., Toth, N.P., 1981. Microwear polishes on early stone tools from Koobi Fora, Kenya. Nature 293, 464–465.
Kibunjia, M., 1994. Pliocene archaeological occurrences in the Lake Turkana basin. Journal of Human Evolution 27, 159–171.
Kibunjia, M., 1998. Archaeological investigations of Lokalalei 1 (GaJh5): a Late Pliocene site, west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. Ph.D. dissertation, Rutgers University.
Kibunjia, M., Roche, H., Brown, F.H., Leakey, R.E.F., 1992. Pliocene and Pleistocene archaeological sites west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. Journal of Human Evolution 23, 431–438.
Kimbel, W.H., Walter, R.C., Johanson, D.C., Reed, K.E., Aronson, J.L, Assefa, Z., Marean, C.W., Eck, G.G., Bobe-Quinteros, R., Hovers, E., Rak, Y., Vondra, C., Yemane, T., York, D., Chen, Y., Evenson, N.M., Smith, P.E., 1996. Late Pliocene Homo and Oldowan tools from the Hadar Formation (Kada Hadar Member), Ethiopia. Journal of Human Evolution 31, 549–561.
Kuman, K., 1994. The archaeology of Sterkfontein, past and present. Journal of Human Evolution 27, 471–495.
Kuman, K., 2003. Site formation in the early South African stone age sites and its infl uence on the archaeological record. South African Journal of Science 99, 251–254.
Langbroek, M., 2004. Out of Africa: An Investigation into the Earliest Occupation of the Old World. Archaeopress (British Archaeological Reports International Series 1244), Oxford.
Leakey, L.S.B., 1936. Stone Age Africa. Oxford University Press, London.
Leakey, M.D., 1971. Olduvai Gorge: Excavations in Beds I and II, 1960–1963. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Lordkipanidze, D., Vekua, A., Ferring, R., Rightmire, P.G., Zollikofer, C.P.E., Ponce de Leon, M.S., Agusti, J., Kiladze, G., Mouskhelishvili, A., Nioradze, M., Tappen, M., 2006. A fourth hominin skull from Dmanisi, Georgia. Anatomical Record 288A, 1146–1157.
Marean, C.W., 1989. Sabertooth cats and their relevance for early hom-inid diet and evolution. Journal of Human Evolution 18, 559–582.
Marean, C.W., Spencer, L.M., Blumenschine, R.J., Capaldo, S.D., 1992. Captive hyaena bone choice and destruction, the schlepp effect and Olduvai archaeofaunas. Journal of Archaeological Science 19, 101–121.
McGrew, W.C., 1992. Chimpanzee Material Culture: Implications for Human Evolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Mercader, J., Panger, M., Boesch, C., 2002. Excavation of a chimpanzee stone tool site in the African rain forest. Science 296, 1452–1455.
Mitani, J.C., Watts, D.P., 2001. Why do chimpanzees hunt and share meat? Animal Behaviour 61, 915–924.
Monahan, C.M., 1996. New zooarchaeological data from Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania: implications for hominid behavior in the Early Pleistocene. Journal of Human Evolution 31, 93–128.
Mora, R., de la Torre, I., 2005. Percussion tools in Olduvai Beds I and II (Tanzania): implications for early human activities. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 24, 179–192.
O'Brien, E.M., 1981. The projectile capabilities of an Acheulean handaxe from Olorgesailie. Current Anthropology 22, 76–79.
Oliver, J.S., 1994. Estimates of hominid and carnivore involvement in the FLK Zinjanthropus fossil assemblage: some socioecological implications. Journal of Human Evolution 27, 267–294.
Pelegrin, J., 2005. Remarks about archaeological technics and methods of knapping: elements of cognitive approach to stone knapping. In: Brill, B., Roux, V. (Eds.), Stone Knapping: the Necessary Conditions for a Uniquely Hominid Behaviour. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 23–34.
Pickering, T.R., 1999. Taphonomic interpretations of the Sterkfontein early hominid site (Gauteng, South Africa) reconsidered in light of recent evidence. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin, MI.
Pickering, T.R., White, T.D., Toth, N., 2000. Cutmarks on a Plio-Pleistocene hominid from Sterkfontein, South Africa. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 111, 579–584.
Plummer, T., 2004. Flaked stone and old bones: biological and cultural evolution at the dawn of technology. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 47, 118–164.
Plummer, T., Bishop, L.C., Ditchfi eld, P., Hicks, J., 1999. Research on Late Pliocene Oldowan sites at Kanjera South, Kenya. Journal of Human Evolution 36, 151–170.
Pobiner, B.L., 2007. Hominin-carnivore interactions: evidence from modern carnivore bone modifi cation and Early Pleistocene archaeo-faunas (Koobi Fora, Kenya; Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania). Ph.D. dissertation, Rutgers University.
Potts, R., 1988. Early Hominid Activities at Olduvai. Aldine de Gruyter, New York.
Potts, R., Shipman, P., 1981. Cut-marks made by stone tools on bones from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Nature 291, 577–580.
Prat, S., Brugal, J.-P., Tiercelin, J.-J., Barrat, J.-A., Bohn, M., Delagnes, A., Harmand, S., Kimeu, K., Kibunjia, M., Texier, P.-J., Roche, H., 2005. First occurrence of early Homo in the Nachukui Formation (West Turkana, Kenya) at 2.3–2.4 Myr. Journal of Human Evolution 49, 230–240.
Pruetz, J.D., Bertolani, P., 2007. Savanna chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes verus, hunt with tools. Current Biology 17, 412–417.
Roche, H., 1989. Technological evolution in early hominids. Ossa 14, 97–98.
Roche, H., 2005. From simple fl aking to shaping: stone knapping evolution among early hominins. In: Brill, B., Roux, V. (Eds.), Stone Knapping: the Necessary Conditions for a Uniquely Hominid Behaviour. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 35–52.
Roche, H., Kibunjia, M., 1996. Contribution of the West Turkana Plio-Pleistocene sites to the archaeology of the lower Omo Turkana Basin. Kaupia 6, 27–30.
Roche, H., Tiercelin, J.-J., 1977. Découverte d'une industrie lithique ancienne in situ dans la Formation d'Hadar. Comptes Rendus de l'Acadamie des Sciences Paris, 284, série D, 1871–1874.
Roche, H., Tiercelin, J.-J., 1980. Industries lithiques de la Formation plio-pléistocène de Hadar, Ethiopie (campagne 1976). In: Leakey, R.E.F., Ogot, B.A. (Eds.), Proceedings of the Seventh Panafrican Congress of Prehistory and Quaternary Studies (Nairobi 1977). The International Louis Leakey Memorial Institute for African Prehistory, Nairobi, Kenya, pp. 194–199.
Roche, H., Delagnes, A., Brugal, J.-P., Feibel, C.S., Kibunja, M., Mourre, V., Texier, P.-J., 1999. Early hominid stone tool production and technical skill 2.34 Myr ago, in West Turkana, Kenya. Nature 399, 57–90.
Roche, H., Brugal, J.-P., Delagnes, A., Feibel, C., Harmand, S., Kibunjia, M., Prat, S., Texier, P.-J., 2003. Les sites archeologiques plio- pleistocenes de la formation de Nachukui, Ouest-Turkana, Kenya: bilan synthétique 1997–2001. Comptes Rendus Palevol 2, 663–673.
Sahnouni, M., 2005. Point des connaissances du Paléolithique ancien d'Afrique du Nord et la question de la première occupation humaine au Maghreb. In: Sahnouni, M. (Ed.), Les cultures paléolithique en Afrique. ArtCom-Errance, Paris, pp. 99–128.
Sahnouni, M., 2006. The North African Early Stone Age and the sites at Ain Hanech, Algeria. In: Toth, N.P., Schick, K. (Eds.), The Oldowan: Case Studies Into the Earliest Stone Age. Stone Age Institute Press, Bloomington, pp. 77–112.
Schick, K., Toth, N.P., 2006. An overview of the Oldowan industrial complex: the sites and the nature of the evidence. In: Toth, N.P., Schick, K. (Eds.), The Oldowan: Case Studies Into the Earliest Stone Age. Stone Age Institute Press, Bloomington, pp. 3–42.
Selvaggio, M.M., 1998. Evidence for a three-stage sequence of hom-inid and carnivore involvement with long bones at FLK Zinjanthropus, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Journal of Archaeological Science 25, 191–202.
Semaw, S., 2000. The world's oldest stone Artefacts from Gona, Ethiopia: their implications for understanding stone technology and patterns of human evolution between 2.6-1.5 million years ago. Journal of Archaeological Science 27, 1197–1214.
Semaw, S., Renne, P., Harris, J.W.K., Feibel, C.S., Bernor, R.L., Fesseha, N., Mowbray, K., 1997. 2.5-million-year-old stone tools from Gona, Ethiopia. Science 284, 625–629.
Semaw, S., Rogers, M.J., Quade, J., Renne, P.R., Butler, R.F., Dominguez-Rodrigo, M., Stout, D., Hart, W.S., Pickering, T., Simpson, S.W., 2003. 2.6-million-year-old stone tools and associated bones from OGS-6 and OGS-7, Gona, Afar, Ethiopia. Journal of Human Evolution 45, 169–177.
Shea, J.J., 2006. Child's play: refl ections on the invisibility of children in the paleolithic record. Evolutionary Anthropology 15, 212–216.
Shea, J.J., 2007. Lithic archaeology, or, what stone tools can (and can't) tell us about early hominin diets. In: Ungar, P.S. (Ed.), Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown and the Unknowable. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 321–351.
Shipman, P., Walker, A., 1989. The costs of becoming a predator. Journal of Human Evolution 18, 373–392.
Spencer, L.M., 1997. Dietary adaptations of Plio-Pleistocene Bovidae: implications for hominid habitat use. Journal of Human Evolution 32, 201–228.
Stanford, C.B., Bunn, H.T. (Eds.), 2001. Meat Eating and Human Evolution. Oxford University Press, New York.
Stiles, D.N., Hay, R.L., Oneil, J.R., 1974. The MNK chert factory site, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. World Archaeology 5, 285–308.
Stout, D., Quade, J., Semaw, S., Rogers, M.J., Levin, N.E., 2005. Raw material selectivity of the earliest stone toolmakers at Gona, Afar, Ethiopia. Journal of Human Evolution 48, 365–380.
Susman, R.L., 1991. Who made the Oldowan tools? Fossil evidence for tool behavior in Plio-Pleistocene hominids. Journal of Anthropological Research 47, 129–151.
Tactikos, J.C., 2005. A Landscape Perspective on the Oldowan from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Ph.D. dissertation, Rutgers University.
Theime, H., 1997. Lower Paleolithic hunting spears from Germany. Nature 385, 807–810.
Toth, N., Schick, K., Semaw, S., 1996. Further investigations of the Oldowan: lessons from the prehistoric record, experimental archaeology, and apes. In: Braun D., Hovers, E. (Orgs), Symposium: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Understanding the Oldowan, Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Toth, N.P., 1987. Behavioral inferences from early stone artifact assemblages: an experimental model. Journal of Human Evolution 16, 763–787.
Toth, N.P., 1997. The artifact assemblages in the light of experimental studies. In: Isaac, G.L., Isaac, assisted by Isaac, B. (Eds.), Koobi Fora Research Project, Volume 5: Plio-Pleistocene Archaeology. Clarendon, Oxford, pp. 363–402.
Toth, N.P., Schick, K. (Eds.), 2006. The Oldowan: Case Studies Into the Earliest Stone Age. Stone Age Institute Press, Bloomington, IN.
Ungar, P. (Ed.), 2007. Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable. Oxford University Press, New York.
Walker, A., Leakey, R.E., Harris, J.M., Brown, F., 1986. 2.5-myr Australopithecus boisei from west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. Nature 322, 517–522.
Wang, W., Potts, R., Baoyin, Y., Huang, W., Cheng, H., Edwards, R.L., Ditchfi eld, P., 2007. Sequence of mammalian fossils, including hominoid teeth, from the Bubing Basin caves, South China. Journal of Human Evolution 52, 370–379.
Washburn, S.L., Lancaster, C.S., 1968. The evolution of hunting. In: Lee, R.B., DeVore, I. (Eds.), Man the Hunter. Aldine, Chicago, IL, pp. 293–303.
Werdelin, L., Lewis, M., 2005. Plio-Pleistocene Carnivora of eastern Africa: species richness and turnover patterns. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 144, 121–144.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2009 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Roche, H., Blumenschine, R.J., Shea, J.J. (2009). Origins and Adaptations of Early Homo: What Archeology Tells Us. In: Grine, F.E., Fleagle, J.G., Leakey, R.E. (eds) The First Humans – Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo. Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9980-9_12
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9980-9_12
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-9979-3
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-9980-9
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)