Homo heidelbergensis and The Origins of The Middle Stone Age: The Kabwe (Broken Hill) Lithic Assemblage - African Archaeological Review

The Middle Stone Age (MSA) saw the emergence of novel behaviours in the archaeological record and is generally associated with our own species, Homo sapiens. Yet, most archaeological assemblages contain no fossil remains, with those rare assemblages with a fossil association giving a less than clear-cut picture. Here, we describe the lithic assemblage from Kabwe, Zambia, a cave site that was originally discovered in the early twentieth century and is most famous for the Kabwe cranium, an exceptionally well-preserved Middle Pleistocene Homo fossil. The nature of the assemblage’s excavation means that it is not well-provenanced. To address this issue, we draw on archival data related to the original excavations and discoveries during the 1920s and use the remains of original matrix still adhering to several of the lithic artefacts to separate out the assemblage stratigraphically. This indicates no significant difference in technological strategies across the assemblage. Whilst there is an Early Stone Age component to the assemblage in the form of spheroids, it is generally consistent with MSA technological strategies, including notably Levallois-like and laminar modes of production evident from cores and debitage. We thus interpret the Kabwe assemblage as a transitional ESA/MSA industry. Due to the possible association with Homo heidelbergensis sensu lato fossils in the form of both the Kabwe cranium and postcranial remains, this hints that the early MSA could have included other members of our clade rather than just Homo sapiens, complicating current models of MSA origins.

SpringerLink

8-Oct-2025
Early #humans butchered #elephants using small tools and made big tools from their bones
Multiple sites in central Italy show consistent strategy during warm parts of the #MiddlePleistocene
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1100481

See also my feature on the long suffering of elephants:
https://proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2024/01/the-long-history-of-elephants-suffering.html

#science #anthropology #palaeoanthropology #ecology #hunting #megafauna

Early humans butchered elephants using small tools and made big tools from their bones

During warmer periods of the Middle Pleistocene, ancient humans in Italy were in the habit of butchering elephants for meat and raw materials, according to a study published October 8, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Beniamino Mecozzi of Sapienza University of Rome, Italy and colleagues.

EurekAlert!

New U-series dating on the #Petralona cranium: 286 ka +/- 9

'From a morphological point of view, the Petralona hominin forms part of a distinct and more primitive group than Homo sapiens and Neanderthals, and the new age estimate provides further support for the coexistence of this population alongside the evolving Neanderthal lineage in the later Middle Pleistocene of Europe.'

#MiddlePleistocene #Europe #fossils

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248425000855

Wooden tools -- an assemblage of 35 wooden implements from the site of Gantangqing in southwestern China, which was found associated with stone tools, antler billets (soft hammers), and cut-marked bones and is dated from ~361,000 to ~250,000 years at a 95% confidence interval. The wooden implements include digging sticks and small, complete, hand-held pointed tools.

Not as old as Kalambo Falls (Zambia) carpentry, but older than Schoningen spears...

#archaeology #MiddlePleistocene #woodworking #Asia

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adr8540

FREE community #fediscience, please BOOST!

TONIGHT in London,
Everybody welcome, just turn up!
LIVE or ZOOM

🌖Tues Nov 19 🌗18:30 (London UK)
with #ChrisStringer
LIVE @UCLanthropology
And on ZOOM

'Denisovans, Dragon Man and more...'

LIVE in the Daryll Forde Room, 2nd Floor of the UCL Anthropology Dept, 14 Taviton St, London WC1H 0BW

ZOOM ID 384 186 2174 passcode Wawilak

World expert on human fossils, Chris Stringer, main originator of the #RecentOutofAfrica model, will be discussing some of the latest fossil evidence and developments in palaeogenomics, looking at Chinese/E Asia Middle Pleistocene lineages.

He is speaking LIVE in the Daryll Forde, 2nd Floor, UCL Anthropology Dept. Get there in good time by 6:30 pm before doors close.or join on ZOOM.

#fossils #China #MiddlePleistocene #Denisova #Harbin #anthropology #palaeontology #palaeogenetics

#VideoTitle "Top Four Recent Human Evolution Discoveries", by https://youtube.com/@gutsickgibbon at https://youtu.be/ZJLm5ag7bRw

#VideoDescription
"""[…]

[1] Vocal labeling of others by nonhuman primates
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adp3757

[2] Early evolution of small body size in Homo floresiensis
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-50649-7

[3] A 4.3-million-year-old Australopithecus anamensis mandible from Ileret, East Turkana, Kenya, and its paleoenvironmental context
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0047248424000873

[4] Long genetic and social isolation in Neanderthals before their extinction
https://www.cell.com/cell-genomics/fulltext/S2666-979X(24)00177-0?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS2666979X24001770%3Fshowall%3Dtrue

[5] Spatial sampling bias influences our understanding of early hominin evolution in eastern Africa
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-024-02522-5

[6] Darwin's fear was unjustified: Study suggests fossil record gaps not a major issue
https://phys.org/news/2024-08-darwin-unjustified-fossil-gaps-major.html

[7] Annelid Comparative Genomics and the Evolution of Massive Lineage-Specific Genome Rearrangement in Bilaterians
https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article/41/9/msae172/7733614?login=false
"""

TAGS:
[1] #Cognition #cognitiveFunction #Vocalization #vocalCall #Marmoset #Language #Communication #socialCommunication

[2] #HomoGenus #H_floresiensis #H_luzonensis #MataMenge #FloresIsland #Indonesia #middlePleistocene #Pleistocene #homininFossil #Java #H_erectus #60ka #700ka

[3] #homininMandible #EastTurkana #Kenya #4_3Ma #Australopithecus #Au_anamensis #Au_afarensis #Ardipithecus #Ar_ramidus #Anagenesis #Cladogenesis

[4] #Neanderthal #Thorin #Eurasia #Gibraltar #GrotteMandrin #France #50ka #42ka #105ka

[5] #EasternAfricanRiftSystem #EARS #cercopithecinePrimate

[6] #FossilRecord #Simulation #Projection #Resolution

[7] #Genome #Genomics #Recombination #geneticRecombination #Adaptation #Speciation #bilateralSymmetry #Annelida #Clitellata #Leech #Earthworm

Before you continue to YouTube

Anthropologists Reconstruct Face of Homo heidelbergensis
Anthropologists in Greece have used facial reconstruction techniques to show how Homo heidelbergensis, a poorly understood relative of Neanderthals that lived between 700,000 to 200,000 years ago, might have once looked.
https://www.sci.news/othersciences/anthropology/homo-heidelbergensis-facial-reconstruction-12354.html #facial #reconstruction #Homo #heidelbergensis #paleoanthropology #Petralona #skull #MiddlePleistocene

Before c.100,000 years ago, or the end of the #MiddlePleistocene say 130,000 years ago, the ONLY repeated material cultural evidence involving signaling behaviours in Homo is the #archaeological record of earth #pigment use.

Going back c.500,000 years -- that is pre- Homo sapiens -- this overwhelmingly comprises blood-red iron oxides, known as ochre, including #haematite and the sparkly #specularite. Sites like #WonderwerkCave and #CanteenKopje in the Northern Cape have the oldest pigments which Ian Watts has analysed here
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/686484

3/
Images: View from the back of Wonderwerk Cave, a huge space carved by an ancient river deep into the hillside. Pieces of sparkly specularite and blood-red haematite are some of the world's oldest pigments

Early Evidence for Brilliant Ritualized Display: Specularite Use in the Northern Cape (South Africa) between ∼500 and ∼300 Ka | Current Anthropology: Vol 57, No 3

Earth pigments figure prominently in debates about signal evolution among later Homo. Most archaeologists consider such behavior to postdate ~300 Ka. To evaluate claims for Fauresmith and Acheulean pigments in South Africa’s Northern Cape Province, extending back 1.1 Ma (Beaumont and Bednarik 2013), we reexamined collections from Kathu Pan 1, Wonderwerk Cave, and Canteen Kopje. We report and describe materials where we are confident as to a pigment status. We found (i) compelling evidence of absence in all but the youngest Acheulean contexts, (ii) definite but irregular use in Fauresmith contexts from at least 500 Ka, (iii) widespread and regular use within this limited area by ~300 Ka, coeval with circumstantial evidence for pigment transport over considerable distances and use in fire-lit environments. These findings are used to evaluate predictions derived from two competing hypotheses addressing the evolution of group ritual, the “female cosmetic coalitions” hypothesis (Power 2009) and the “cheap-but-honest signals” hypothesis (Kuhn 2014), finding that the former accounts for a greater range of the observations. The findings underscore the wider behavioral significance of the Fauresmith as an industry transitional between the Acheulean and the Middle Stone Age.

Current Anthropology
Footprints indicate human presence in Spain in Middle Pleistocene, 200,000 years earlier than previously thought

Researcher and GRS Radioisotopes technician Jorge Rivera, from the University of Seville, has participated in an incredible discovery that is unique in Europe. After applying an optically-stimulated luminescence technique at the Center for Research, Technology and Innovation laboratories at the University of Seville (CITIUS) and at CENIEH to hominin footprints found at Matalascañas in 2020, Rivera helped to determine that the footprints are in fact 200,000 years older than previously suspected.

Phys.org