Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa

Pottery and livestock reached lithic using people in southern Africa some 2000 years ago. It has been suggested that early ceramics were introduced from further north then spread to the southernmost tip of Africa by an immigrant Khoekhoe herder population. How pottery and small livestock spread in s...

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Main Author: Modikwa, Baatlhodi
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/6984
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-69842019-05-11T03:42:04Z Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa Modikwa, Baatlhodi Later Stone Age Chaines operatoires Bambata pottery Lithic technology Lithic typology Toteng 1 Mphekwane Rock Shelter Pottery and livestock reached lithic using people in southern Africa some 2000 years ago. It has been suggested that early ceramics were introduced from further north then spread to the southernmost tip of Africa by an immigrant Khoekhoe herder population. How pottery and small livestock spread in southern Africa is debated. Some scholars believe that migrating Khoekhoe herders were responsible while others state that networks of local hunter-gatherer groups gained livestock and pottery by exchange and diffusion. Some think that both migration and diffusion played a part. The aim of this study is to contribute to this debate by comparing lithic technology in pre-pottery and pottery assemblages in the Central Limpopo Basin and northern Botswana. An abrupt change in lithic technology across the 2000 BP boundary would favour the migration model while gradual or no change would favour the diffusion model. This study focuses on two contemporary sites with Bambata pottery. Assemblages from Toteng 1 and Mphekwane Rock shelter in northern Botswana and the Central Limpopo Basin are analysed. For lithic analysis at both sites, the chaînes opératoires approach is employed. Although the method is not commonly applied to southern African Later Stone Age assemblages, it has broad appeal and potential in other parts of the world. The essential difference between this approach and the commonly applied typological approach in southern Africa is that it encompasses the whole life history of lithic material, from the basic nodule to finished tools. The study focuses much on the technological analysis and this dominates the analytical part. However, typological analysis was also performed in the study in classifying different categories of formal tools. 2009-05-26T08:58:19Z 2009-05-26T08:58:19Z 2009-05-26T08:58:19Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/6984 en application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Later Stone Age
Chaines operatoires
Bambata pottery
Lithic technology
Lithic typology
Toteng 1
Mphekwane Rock Shelter
spellingShingle Later Stone Age
Chaines operatoires
Bambata pottery
Lithic technology
Lithic typology
Toteng 1
Mphekwane Rock Shelter
Modikwa, Baatlhodi
Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
description Pottery and livestock reached lithic using people in southern Africa some 2000 years ago. It has been suggested that early ceramics were introduced from further north then spread to the southernmost tip of Africa by an immigrant Khoekhoe herder population. How pottery and small livestock spread in southern Africa is debated. Some scholars believe that migrating Khoekhoe herders were responsible while others state that networks of local hunter-gatherer groups gained livestock and pottery by exchange and diffusion. Some think that both migration and diffusion played a part. The aim of this study is to contribute to this debate by comparing lithic technology in pre-pottery and pottery assemblages in the Central Limpopo Basin and northern Botswana. An abrupt change in lithic technology across the 2000 BP boundary would favour the migration model while gradual or no change would favour the diffusion model. This study focuses on two contemporary sites with Bambata pottery. Assemblages from Toteng 1 and Mphekwane Rock shelter in northern Botswana and the Central Limpopo Basin are analysed. For lithic analysis at both sites, the chaînes opératoires approach is employed. Although the method is not commonly applied to southern African Later Stone Age assemblages, it has broad appeal and potential in other parts of the world. The essential difference between this approach and the commonly applied typological approach in southern Africa is that it encompasses the whole life history of lithic material, from the basic nodule to finished tools. The study focuses much on the technological analysis and this dominates the analytical part. However, typological analysis was also performed in the study in classifying different categories of formal tools.
author Modikwa, Baatlhodi
author_facet Modikwa, Baatlhodi
author_sort Modikwa, Baatlhodi
title Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
title_short Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
title_full Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
title_fullStr Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern Africa
title_sort lithic technology and introduction of pottery in southern africa
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/6984
work_keys_str_mv AT modikwabaatlhodi lithictechnologyandintroductionofpotteryinsouthernafrica
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