67,000 years of coastal engagement at Panga ya Saidi, eastern Africa

The antiquity and nature of coastal resource procurement is central to understanding human evolution and adaptations to complex environments. It has become increasingly apparent in global archaeological studies that the timing, characteristics, and trajectories of coastal resource use are highly var...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-08, Vol.16 (8), p.e0256761-e0256761
Hauptverfasser: Faulkner, Patrick, Miller, Jennifer M, Quintana Morales, Eréndira M, Crowther, Alison, Shipton, Ceri, Ndiema, Emmanuel, Boivin, Nicole, Petraglia, Michael D
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container_title PloS one
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creator Faulkner, Patrick
Miller, Jennifer M
Quintana Morales, Eréndira M
Crowther, Alison
Shipton, Ceri
Ndiema, Emmanuel
Boivin, Nicole
Petraglia, Michael D
description The antiquity and nature of coastal resource procurement is central to understanding human evolution and adaptations to complex environments. It has become increasingly apparent in global archaeological studies that the timing, characteristics, and trajectories of coastal resource use are highly variable. Within Africa, discussions of these issues have largely been based on the archaeological record from the south and northeast of the continent, with little evidence from eastern coastal areas leaving significant spatial and temporal gaps in our knowledge. Here, we present data from Panga ya Saidi, a limestone cave complex located 15 km from the modern Kenyan coast, which represents the first long-term sequence of coastal engagement from eastern Africa. Rather than attempting to distinguish between coastal resource use and coastal adaptations, we focus on coastal engagement as a means of characterising human relationships with marine environments and resources from this inland location. We use aquatic mollusc data spanning the past 67,000 years to document shifts in the acquisition, transportation, and discard of these materials, to better understand long-term trends in coastal engagement. Our results show pulses of coastal engagement beginning with low-intensity symbolism, and culminating in the consistent low-level transport of marine and freshwater food resources, emphasising a diverse relationship through time. Panga ya Saidi has the oldest stratified evidence of marine engagement in eastern Africa, and is the only site in Africa which documents coastal resources from the Late Pleistocene through the Holocene, highlighting the potential archaeological importance of peri-coastal sites to debates about marine resource relationships.
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subjects Adaptation
Adaptation, Physiological - physiology
Africa, Eastern
Animals
Archaeology
Biology and Life Sciences
Caves
Coastal resources
Coastal zone
Coasts
Earth Sciences
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Evaluation
Evolution
Food resources
Holocene
Humans
Interpersonal relations
Kenya
Limestone
Marine environment
Marine resources
Mollusca - genetics
Mollusca - physiology
Mollusks
Museums
Pleistocene
Shellfish
Social aspects
Social sciences
title 67,000 years of coastal engagement at Panga ya Saidi, eastern Africa
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