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Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Homo sapiens origins and evolution in the Kalahari Basin, southern Africa [Scholarly Article - Evolutionary Anthropology, August 2021]

Title:
Homo sapiens origins and evolution in the Kalahari Basin, southern Africa 
 
Author:
Jayne Wilkins 
ARC DECRA research fellow at the Australian Centre for Human Evolution, Griffith University, Australia
 
Published:
Evolutionary Anthropology, (First published) 07 August 2021 
 
Abstract: 
The Kalahari Basin, southern Africa preserves a rich archeological record of human origins and evolution spanning the Early, Middle and Late Pleistocene. Since the 1930s, several stratified and dated archeological sites have been identified and investigated, together with numerous open-air localities that provide landscape-scale perspectives. However, next to recent discoveries from nearby coastal regions, the Kalahari Basin has remained peripheral to debates about the origins of Homo sapiens. Though the interior region of southern Africa is generally considered to be less suitable for hunter-gatherer occupation than coastal and near-coastal regions, especially during glacial periods, the archeological record documents human presence in the Kalahari Basin from the Early Pleistocene onwards, and the region is not abandoned during glacial phases. Furthermore, many significant behavioral innovations have an early origin in the Kalahari Basin, which adds support to poly-centric, pan-African models for the emergence of our species.