3 research outputs found
The carnivorous feeding behavior of early humans at HWK EE, Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania
The regular consumption of large mammal carcasses, as evidenced by butchery marks on fossils
recovered from Early Stone Age archaeological sites, roughly coincides with the appearance of Homo
habilis. However, the significance of this niche expansion cannot be appreciated without an understanding of hominin feeding behavior and their ecological interactions with mammalian carnivores. The
Olduvai Geochronology and Archaeology Project (OGAP) has recovered a large and well-preserved fossil
assemblage from the HWK EE site, which was deposited just prior to the first appearance of Acheulean
technology at Olduvai Gorge and likely represents one of the last H. habilis sites at Olduvai. This taphonomic analysis of the larger mammal fossil assemblage excavated from HWK EE shows evidence of
multiple occupations over a long period of time, suggesting the site offered resources that were attractive
to hominins. There was a water source indicated by the presence of fish, crocodiles, and hippos, and there
was possible tree cover in an otherwise open habitat. The site preserves several stratigraphic intervals
with large fossil and artifact assemblages within two of these intervals. Feeding traces on bone surfaces
suggest hominins at the site obtained substantial amounts of flesh and marrow, particularly from smaller
size group 1e2 carcasses, and exploited a wide range of taxa, including megafauna. A strong carnivore
signal suggests hominins scavenged much of their animal foods during the two main stratigraphic intervals. In the later interval, lower carnivore tooth mark and hammerstone percussion mark frequencies,
in addition to high epiphyseal to shaft fragment ratios, suggest hominins and carnivores did not fully
exploit bone marrow and grease, which may have been acquired from nutritionally-stressed animals that
died during a dry period at Olduvai. The diversity of fauna that preserve evidence of butchery suggests
that the HWK EE hominins were opportunistic in their acquisition of carcass foods.The research was funded by the European Research Council (European Union's Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007e2013)/ERC grant agreement nº 283366 (ORACEAF), National Science Foundation Archaeology (reference number BCS-0852292), the British Academy Small Research Grant (reference number SG121630) and the Wenner-Gren Foundation (Gr. 9245).Peer reviewe
