Nubian Complex strategies in the Egyptian high desert |
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Authors: | Deborah I. Olszewski Harold L. Dibble Utsav A. Schurmans Jennifer R. Smith |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Anthropology and Penn Museum, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA b Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Human Evolution, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany c Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Abri Pataud, 20 rue du Moyen Age, 24620 Les Eyzies-de-Tayac, France d Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, One Brookings Drive, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA |
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Abstract: | Systematic survey by the Abydos Survey for Paleolithic Sites project has recorded Nubian Complex artifact density, distribution, typology, and technology across the high desert landscape west of the Nile Valley in Middle Egypt. Our work contrasts with previous investigations of Nubian Complex settlement systems in Egypt, which focused on a small number of sites in the terraces of the Nile Valley, the desert oases, and the Red Sea Mountains. Earlier research interpreted the Nubian Complex, in particular, as a radiating settlement system that incorporated a specialized point production. Our high desert data, however, indicate that the Nubian Complex associated with early modern humans in this region of the high desert reflects a circulating, rather than a radiating, settlement system, and that point production has been over-emphasized. Data available from our work, as well as sites investigated by others, do not conclusively identify Nubian Complex behavioral strategies as modern. These data, however, do contribute to the understanding of landscape use by early modern human populations living along the Nile Valley Corridor route out of Africa. |
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Keywords: | Middle Paleolithic Egypt Settlement systems Early modern humans |
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