Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T00:33:17.180Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Transformations of Upper Palaeolithic implements in the Dabba industry from Haua Fteah (Libya)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Peter Hiscock*
Affiliation:
Northern Territory University, Casuarina NT 0909, Australia. E-mail: P_HISCOCK@BANKS.NTU.EDU.AU

Extract

Different models of stone-working technology in the Upper Palaeolithic are tested by examining an assemblage from Haua Fteah, on the Libyan coast of north Africa. Evidence that some scrapers have been reworked into burins, while some burins were modified to form scrapers, show how this typically Upper Palaeolithic industry contains morphological transformations between types. This evidence is consistent with a technological continuity from the Middle Palaeolithic.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BinFord, L.R., 1989. Isolating the transition to cultural adaptations: an organizational approach, in Trinkaus, E. (ed.), The emergence of modern humans: 1841. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Clark, G.A. & Willermet, C.M.. 1995. In search of the Neanderthals: some conceptual issues with special reference to the Levant, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 5 (1): 153–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornford, J. M. 1986. Specialized resharpening techniques and evidence of handedness, in Callow, P. & Cornford, J. M. (ed.), La Cotte de St Brelade: 337–51. Norwich: Geo Books.Google Scholar
Dibble, H. L. 1984. Interpreting typological variation of Middle Palaeolithic scrapers: function, style, or sequence of reduction?, Journal of Field Archaeology 11: 431–6.Google Scholar
Dibble, H. L. 1987. The interpretation of middle Palaeolithic scraper morphology, American Antiquity 52 (1): 109–17.Google Scholar
Flenniken, J. J. 1985. Stone tool reduction techniques as cultural markers, in Plew, M. G., Woods, J. C. & Pavesic, M.C. (ed.), Stone tool analysis: essays in honor of Don E. Crabtree: 265–76. Albuquerque (NM): University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Flenniken, J. J. & Raymond, A. W.. 1986. Morphological projectile point typology: replication, experimentation and technological analysis, American Antiquity 51 (3): 603–14.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1977. Stone tool functions in the Western Desert, in Wright, S.R.V. (ed.), Stone tools as cultural markers: change, evolution and complexity. 178–88. Sydney; Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Hlscock, P. 1993. Bondaian technology in the Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Archaeology in Oceania 28: 6475.Google Scholar
Hlscock, P. 1994. The end of points, in Sullivan, M. et al. (ed.), Archaeology in the North: 7283. Darwin: North Australia Research Unit, Australian National University.Google Scholar
Hlscock, P. & Veth, P.. 1991. Change in the Australian Desert Culture: a reanalysis of tulas from Puntutjarpa, World Archaeology 22 (3): 332–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holdaway, S. J. 1991. Resharpening reduction and lithic assemblage variability across the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition. Unpublished Ph.D thesis, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Holmes, W. H. 1890. A quarry workshop of the flaked stone implement makers in the District of Columbia, American Anthropologists 3 (1): 126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhn, S. 1993. On planning and curated technologies in the middle Palaeolithic, Journal of Archaeological Research 48 (3): 185209.Google Scholar
Llndly, J. M. & Clark, G. A.. 1990. On the emergence of modern humans, Current Anthropology 31 il): 5966.Google Scholar
Marshack, A. 1990. Early hominid symbol and evolution of the human capacity, in Meilars, (ed.): 457–98.Google Scholar
Mcburney, C. 1967 The Haua Fteah (Cyrenaica) and the Stone Age of the south-east Mediterranean. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mellars, P. 1989. Major issues in the emergence of modern humans, Current Anthropology 30 (2): 349–85.Google Scholar
Mellars, P. (Ed.). 1990. The emergence of modern humans. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Neeley, M. P. & Barton, C.M.. 1994, A new approach to interpreting late Pleistocene microlith industries in southwest Asia, Antiquity 68: 275–88.Google Scholar
Otte, M. 1990. From the Middle to the Upper Palaeolithic: the nature of the transition, in Mellars, (ed): 438–56.Google Scholar
Reynolds, T. 1990. The Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in southwestern France: interpreting the lithic evidence, in Mellars, (ed): 262–75.Google Scholar
Wheat, J. B. 1976. Artifact life histories: cultural templates, typology, evidence and inference, in Raymond, J. S., Loveseth, B., Arnold, C. & Reardon, C. (ed.), Primitive art and technology: 715. Calgary: University of Calgary.Google Scholar