Home > History and Archaeology > Archaeology > Archaeology by period / region > Chert Quarrying, Lithic Technology, and a Modern Human Burial at the Palaeolithic Site of Taramsa 1, Upper Egypt: (Egyptian Prehistory Monographs)
Chert Quarrying, Lithic Technology, and a Modern Human Burial at the Palaeolithic Site of Taramsa 1, Upper Egypt: (Egyptian Prehistory Monographs)

Chert Quarrying, Lithic Technology, and a Modern Human Burial at the Palaeolithic Site of Taramsa 1, Upper Egypt: (Egyptian Prehistory Monographs)

          
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About the Book

This monograph presents the comprehensive report of the excavations of the Belgian Middle Egypt Prehistoric Project at the site of Taramsa 1, near Qena in Upper Egypt. Human groups have exploited chert cobbles at this locale throughout the entire Middle Stone Age. The major Activity Phases at the site are identified with the aid of a series of chronometric dates. The various excavation sectors are meticulously described, both their stratigraphy and the spatial layout of the lithic production activities. One of the most significant finds at the site was the burial of a modern human child. A chapter is devoted to the description of the stratigraphic context of this burial and its dating. The technological analysis establishes Taramsa 1 as a key site in Northeast Africa, bearing witness to a long sequence of change culminating in an Upper Palaeolithic blade technology. Most significant is the dating of the earliest stage of the transition, at around 60,000 years ago, thus suggesting that the Lower Nile Valley was an early core area for the origin of the Upper Palaeolithic of Eurasia. The text is supplemented with numerous sections and plans, as well as artefact illustrations and photographs.

Table of Contents:
Content List of Figures List of Tables. List of Plates Preface 1 - Introduction 1.1 - Geomorphology and geology of the Taramsa area 1.2 - Taramsa Hill morphology 1.3 - General archaeological stratigraphy of Taramsa 1: The Activity Phases 1.4 - Survey, excavation and recording techniques 1.5 - Some conventions of this report 1.5.1 - Definition of assemblages 1.5.2 - Technical notes 1.5.3 - Abbreviations 2 - Analysis of LITHIC production systems 2.1 - Raw data 2.1.1 - Technological classification 2.1.2 - Refitting 2.1.3 - Attribute analysis 2.2 - Generalisation of raw data 2.2.1 - Assemblage structure 2.2.2 - Generalisation of refitting data 2.2.3 - Attribute analysis 3 - Middle Stone Age lithic production systems in Northeast Africa 3.1 - Basic reduction systems 3.1.1 - Geometric and functional organisation 3.1.2 - Percussion and fracture mechanics 3.1.3 - Striking platform types in plane fracture debitage 3.1.4 - Plane fractures and flake forms 3.1.5 - Summary 3.2 - Planimetric debitage systems in the Lower Nile Valley Middle Stone Age 3.2.1 - The Levallois production system 3.2.2 - The discoidal production system 3.3 - Volumetric debitage systems in the Lower Nile Valley Middle Stone Age 3.3.1 - The Taramsa blade production system 3.3.2 - Terminology 4 - Excavation sectors 91/05, 91/07, 89/02, Activity Phases I/II lithic assemblages 4.1 - Sector 91/05 4.1.1 - Stratigraphy 4.1.2 - Analysis of Cc 38 4.1.3 - Discussion 4.2 - Sector 91/07 4.2.1 - Stratigraphy 4.2.2 - Analysis of Cc 17 4.3 - Sector 89/02 4.3.1 - Stratigraphy and exploitation features 4.3.2 - Stratigraphic succession of the concentrations 4.3.3 - Analysis of Cc 05 5 - Excavation sectors 91/02, 89/01, and the Activity Phase II lithic assemblages 5.1 - Sector 91/02 5.1.1 - Stratigraphy and exploitation features 5.1.2 - Analysis of Cc 07 5.1.3 - Analysis of Cc 04 5.1.4 - Conclusion 5.2 - Sector 89/01 5.2.1 - Stratigraphy 5.2.2 - Analysis of Cc 10 6 - Excavation sectors 91/03, 91/01, and the Activity Phase IV lithic assemblages 6.1 - Sector 91/03: stratigraphy and site formation 6.1.1 - Stratigraphy 6.1.2 - Cultural formation processes 6.1.3 - Spatial analysis of Cc 19 6.2 - Sector 91/03 Cc 19: lithic analysis 6.2.1 - General comments 6.2.2 - The Levallois and Taramsa blade production systems 6.2.3 - Morphological characteristics of end products 6.2.4 - Morphological characteristics of cores 6.2.5 - Typology 6.2.6 - Intra-assemblage technological variability 6.2.7 - Cultural formation processes reconsidered 6.3 - Sector 91/01 6.3.1 - Stratigraphy 6.3.2 - Lithic Analysis of Cc 20/25 6.3.3 - Conclusion 7 - Excavation sectors 91/04, 89/04, and the Activity Phase V lithic assemblages 7.1 - Sector 91/04: stratigraphy and site formation 7.1.1 - Deposits and lithic concentrations 7.1.2 - The exploitation stages 7.1.3 - Spatial organisation of lithic production 7.2 - Sector 91/04 main zone: lithic analysis 7.2.1 - The reconstructed reduction sequences 7.2.2 - The Levallois and Taramsa Levallois production systems 7.2.3 - Morphological characteristics of end products 7.2.4 - Morphological characteristics of cores 7.2.5 - Typology 7.2.6 - Chronological and functional variability in main zone lithic production 7.3 - Cultural formation processes in sector 91/04 main zone reconsidered 7.3.1 - Transportation of products 7.3.2 - Were specialist artisans at work in Cc 28? 7.4 - Sector 89/04 7.4.1 - Stratigraphy 7.4.2. - Analysis of Cc 09 7.5 - Comparison of sector 91/04 main zone with sector 91/03 Cc 19 7.5.1 - Chronology 7.5.2 - Lithic production systems 8 - Activity Phase VI: excavation sectors and lithic assemblages 8.1 - Sector 89/03 8.1.1 - Stratigraphy 8.1.2 - Analysis of Cc 12/13 8.1.3 - Conclusion 8.2 - Activity Phase VI assemblages from Sector 89/02 8.2.1 - Lithic analysis of Cc 03 8.2.2 - Spatial analysis of Cc 01 8.2.3 - Lithic analysis of Cc 01 8.3 - Conclusions 9 - other SECTORS AND ASEMBLAGES 9.1 - Sector 91/04 Cc 29 9.1.1 - Description of Refit 29/1 9.1.2 - Morphometric characteristics of end products 9.1.3 - Typology 9.2 - Sector 91/03 Cc 36 9.3 - Sector 91/02 9.3.1 - Cc 02 9.3.2 - Cc 05 9.3.3 - Cc 09 9.4 - Sector 89/02 9.4.1 - Cc 02 9.4.2 - Cc 06 9.4.3 - Cc 07 9.5 - Sector 91/07 Cc 18 9.6 - Sector 89/05 Cc 11 9.7 - Sector 91/06 9.8 - Sector 89/06 9.9 - Sector 89/07 9.10 - Sector 91/08 9.11 - Sector 91/09 9.12 - Isolated artefacts from below the sterile sand 9.13 - A habitation structure? 9.13.1 - Spatial analysis 9.13.2 - Other observations 9.13.3 - Interpretation 10 - The taramsa Burial 10.1 - Description of the burial 10.2 - The lithic assemblage associated with the burial 10.3 - The skeleton 10.4 - Dating 10.5 - Conclusion 11 - discussions and Conclusions 11.1 - The lithic assemblages at Taramsa 1: taxonomic and phylogenetic considerations 11.1.1 - Activity Phase I 11.1.2 - Activity Phase II 11.1.3 - Activity Phase II 11.1.4 - Activity Phase IV 11.1.5 - Activity Phase V 11.1.6 - Activity Phase VI 11.1.7 - Conclusion 11.2 - Raw material procurement strategies 11.2.1 - Activity Phases I, II and II 11.2.2 - Activity Phase IV 11.2.3 - Activity Phase V 11.2.4 - Activity Phase VI 11.2.5 - Chronology of the Activity Phases IV and V succession 11.3 - Interpretations on social structure and evolution 11.4 - A regional perspective 11.4.1 - The late Middle Pleistocene and MIS 5 11.4.2 - The origin of the Upper Palaeolithic 12 - Annexes 12.1 - Comparative table of classifications of assemblages from Taramsa 1 12.2 - Raw data on sequence progressions in the first exploitation surfaces of refitted sequences from sector 91/04 main zone Cc 24 and Cc 28 12.3 - Raw data on all refit sequences from sector 91/03 Cc 19 12.4 - Raw data on the attribute analysis of end products from all assemblages 12.5 - Detailed technological classification of the sub-assemblages in sector 91/04 main zone 12.6 - Raw data used in the Principal Component analysis for refitted sequences from sector 91/04 main zone Cc 24 and 28 12.7 - Anthropological observations from Vermeersch et al. 1998 12.8 - Taramsa CT scan: preliminary report (2002-2003) 12.9 - List of concentrations 12.10 -Technical detail of luminescence measurements 13 - References 14 - INDEX 15 - PLATES


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9789058677860
  • Publisher: Leuven University Press
  • Publisher Imprint: Leuven University Press
  • Depth: 19
  • Language: English
  • Returnable: Y
  • Spine Width: 18 mm
  • Width: 210 mm
  • ISBN-10: 9058677869
  • Publisher Date: 09 Apr 2010
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Height: 305 mm
  • No of Pages: 312
  • Series Title: Egyptian Prehistory Monographs
  • Weight: 1155 gr


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Chert Quarrying, Lithic Technology, and a Modern Human Burial at the Palaeolithic Site of Taramsa 1, Upper Egypt: (Egyptian Prehistory Monographs)
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