CAHO Seminar Series

Dr. James Cole: University of Brighton

Date: 20.03.2015

Time: 5:00pm - 6:00pm

Location: John Wymer Lab (Bld 65A)

IMG_0629

Dating the Early Stone Age site of Isimila, Tanzania.

(James Cole, John McNabb, Pastory Bushozi, Martin Bates and Philip Toms)

Abstract:

The Early Stone Age (ESA) site of Isimila is located on the Iringa plateau, Tanzania, close to the East African Rift Valley. Due to the abundance of handaxes present at the site in both primary and secondary contexts, Isimila has long been recognised as a key site of international importance for understanding the behavioural complexity of our hominin ancestors often compared alongside major East African e.g. Kalambo Falls, Olduvai Gorge and Olorgesailie (Kleindienst and Keller 1976; Mcbrearty 1978). Despite the international significance of Isimila, the chronology, taphonomy and geomorphology of the site remain poorly understood, and are in urgent need of re-examination using modern analytical techniques and theoretical perspectives. Previous dating efforts (a single U-series date from a bone sample) gave an age estimate of 260 kya for the site (Howell et al. 1972). However, this date is problematic due to methodological inadequacies and therefore it is timely to undertake a re-characterisation of Isimila. The subject of this paper is to therefore give details of a new OSL dating programme undertaken at Isimila in 2014 that allows, for the first time, a chronological contextualisation of this unique and important ESA site within the broader setting of the East African Palaeolithic.