Paleoenvironmental and Human Behavioral Implications of the Boegoeberg 1 Late Pleistocene Hyena Den, Northern Cape Province, South Africa
- 1 November 1999
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 52 (3) , 393-403
- https://doi.org/10.1006/qres.1999.2068
Abstract
Boegoeberg 1 (BOG1) is located on the Atlantic coast of South Africa, 850 km north of Cape Town. The site is a shallow rock shelter in the side of a sand-choked gully that was emptied by diamond miners. Abundant coprolites, chewed bones, and partially digested bones implicate hyenas as the bone accumulators. The location of the site, quantity of bones, and composition of the fauna imply it was a brown hyena nursery den. The abundance of Cape fur seal bones shows that the hyenas had ready access to the coast. Radiocarbon dates place the site before 37,00014C yr ago, while the large average size of the black-backed jackals and the presence of extralimital ungulates imply cool, moist conditions, probably during the early part of the last glaciation (isotope stage 4 or stage 3 before 37,00014C yr ago) or perhaps during one of the cooler phases (isotope substages 5d or 5b) within the last interglaciation. Comparisons of the BOG1 seal bones to those from regional Middle Stone Age (MSA) and Later Stone Age (LSA) archeological sites suggest (1) that hyena and human seal accumulations can be distinguished by a tendency for vertebrae to be much more common in a hyena accumulation and (2) that hyena and LSA accumulations can be distinguished by a tendency for hyena-accumulated seals to represent a much wider range of individual seal ages. Differences in the way hyenas and people dismember, transport, and consume seal carcasses probably explain the contrast in skeletal part representation, while differences in season of occupation explain the contrast in seal age representation. Like modern brown hyenas, the BOG1 hyenas probably occupied the coast year-round, while the LSA people focused their coastal visits on the August–October interval when nine-to-eleven-month-old seals were abundant. The MSA sample from Klasies River Mouth Cave 1 resembles BOG1 in seal age composition, suggesting that unlike LSA people, MSA people obtained seals more or less throughout the year.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Mammals of the Southern African Sub-regionPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2005
- The astronomical theory of climate and the age of the Brunhes-Matuyama magnetic reversalPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Derivation and Application of an Otariid Utility IndexJournal of Archaeological Science, 1996
- Space and resource use by brown hyenas Hyaena brunnea in the Namib DesertJournal of Zoology, 1995
- Vertebrate TaphonomyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1994
- Dating, archaeology and human fossils from the Middle Stone Age levels of Die Kelders, South AfricaJournal of Human Evolution, 1991
- Environmental, ecological, and paleoanthropological implications of the late Pleistocene mammalian fauna from Equus Cave, northern Cape Province, South AfricaQuaternary Research, 1991
- Last Interglacial Sea Levels and Coastal Caves in the Cape Province, South AfricaQuaternary Research, 1986
- The Last Interglacial OceanQuaternary Research, 1984
- Nunamiut EthnoarchaeologyEthnohistory, 1980