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An Early Presence of Modern Human or Convergent Evolution? A 247 ka Middle Palaeolithic Assemblage from Andhra Pradesh, India

•Lithic artefacts were excavated from fine-grain sediments in Southern Andhra Pradesh, India.•Artefact bearing horizon was dated to > 247 ka using the OSL technique.•During the Middle Pleistocene epoch, hominins were present in South Asia practising Middle Palaeolithic technology.•Significant por...

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Published in:Journal of archaeological science, reports reports, 2022-10, Vol.45, p.103565, Article 103565
Main Authors: Anil, Devara, Chauhan, Naveen, Ajithprasad, P., Devi, Monika, Mahesh, Vrushab, Khan, Zakir
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Lithic artefacts were excavated from fine-grain sediments in Southern Andhra Pradesh, India.•Artefact bearing horizon was dated to > 247 ka using the OSL technique.•During the Middle Pleistocene epoch, hominins were present in South Asia practising Middle Palaeolithic technology.•Significant portions of Levallois cores, points and flakes were present in the assemblage.•Local innovation of Middle Palaeolithic technology suggested. The region of South Asia, located between the prepared core-based technologies in the west and simple core technologies in the east, is crucial in the modern human dispersal routes. The nature and chronology of initial modern human presence in the region and associated lithic technologies – microlithic vs the Middle Palaeolithic prepared core technology – are debated between the coastal and continental routes of dispersals. Recent research, however, has pushed back the antiquity of Middle Palaeolithic technology in the region to 385 ± 64 ka, suggesting the possibility of local innovation. However, the age mentioned above is isolated spatially and requires further studies to support the local innovation model. Our research in the Paleru river basin, Andhra Pradesh (SE India), have identified several Palaeolithic sites in a stratigraphic context. We present the results of a systematic examination at the Hanumanthunipadu (Andhra Pradesh) site, where the deepest of three geomorphologically distinct phases of the sedimentary sequence contained Palaeolithic artefacts. The fine-grained sediments in the sequence, p-IR-IRSL dated to > 247 ± 32 ka, yielded Middle Palaeolithic artefacts that imply South Asian Middle Palaeolithic assemblages may be a part of local innovations that emerged from the preceding Late Acheulian technologies.
ISSN:2352-409X
DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103565