Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6445976 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
Sites in North Africa hold key information for dating the presence of Homo sapiens and the distribution of Middle Stone Age (MSA), Middle Palaeolithic (MP) and Later Stone Age (LSA) cultural activity in the Late Pleistocene. Here we present new and review recently published tephrochronological evidence for five cave sites in North Africa with long MSA/MP and LSA cultural sequences. Four tephra horizons have been identified at the Haua Fteah (Cyrenaica, Libya). They include cryptotephra evidence for the Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) eruption dating to â¼39Â ka that allows correlation with other Palaeolithic sequences in the eastern Mediterranean and as far north as Russia. Cryptotephra have also been recorded from the Moroccan sites of Taforalt, Rhafas and Dar es-Soltane 1. At Taforalt the geochemical composition suggests a provenance in the Azores, while examples from Sodmein (Egypt) appear to derive from central Anatolia and another unknown source. In these latter examples chemical compositional data from relevant proximal volcanic centres is currently lacking so the identification of tephra in layers of known age and cultural association provides the first reliable age determinations for distal volcanic events and their geographical extent. The future potential for tephrochronological research in North Africa is also discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
R.N.E. Barton, C.S. Lane, P.G. Albert, D. White, S.N. Collcutt, A. Bouzouggar, P. Ditchfield, L. Farr, A. Oh, L. Ottolini, V.C. Smith, P. Van Peer, K. Kindermann,