PalaeoEcology and OPen-LandscapE adaptations of Pleistocene humans in South Africa
The PEOPLE project investigates early human adaptation and dispersal in South Africa by analyzing geological deposits to understand the impact of climate change on subsistence strategies.
Projectdetails
Introduction
Homo sapiens emerged in Africa in the Middle Pleistocene, and their appearance broadly overlaps with the onset of the Middle Stone Age (MSA). This period saw a persistent population expansion into a wide range of ecosystems, including deserts, rainforests, and mountains.
Ecological Flexibility
To develop such ecological flexibility, early humans had to adapt their subsistence strategies to markedly different and dynamic environments that dramatically affected their lifeways. However, we know surprisingly little about the timing and modes of H. sapiens dispersal within Africa.
Research Focus
To address this issue at a subcontinental scale, PEOPLE will look at South African ecosystems that offer ways of assessing human response to climate change. One key factor affecting this response is freshwater availability.
Importance of Water
Water played a crucial role in human adaptation since it determined the foraging activities of people across the open landscape and thus had a pervasive influence over their expansion on the continent. In the interior of South Africa, which features a mosaic of diverse grasslands and arid shrublands dissected by sporadic rivers, ancient water courses and wetlands provided early humans with favorable conditions and possible dispersal routes.
Methodology
To understand how and when humans settled on the subcontinent, PEOPLE will search geological deposits at rivers, springs, and dry lakes in the interior of South Africa, which offer long records of climate change. The aim is twofold:
- Determine the role of changing environments in the adaptive strategies of MSA people.
- Establish a chronology for human palaeoecology based on absolute dating of palaeoenvironments and technological organization.
Research Approach
To achieve these goals, PEOPLE will adopt a multi-scalar geoarchaeological approach led by an interdisciplinary research team.
Expected Outcomes
The results of this project will change our understanding of human dynamics in southern Africa and have the potential to piece together how humans eventually dispersed throughout Africa and beyond.
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 1.499.856 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 1.499.856 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-9-2022 |
Einddatum | 31-8-2027 |
Subsidiejaar | 2022 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRSpenvoerder
- CENTRO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACION SOBRE LA EVOLUCION HUMANA
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pliocene Hominin Dispersal to southern Africa: Choice or Chance?This project investigates the evolutionary adaptability of early hominins in South Africa through geomorphological, palaeoecological, and fossil analyses to understand their dispersal and diversity. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.499.248 | 2024 | Details |
Palaeoenvironments of Human Behavioural Evolution in AfricaPIONEER aims to enhance understanding of early human behavioral evolution by integrating high-resolution climate data with archaeological records to test hypotheses on climate's role in behavioral complexity. | ERC Consolid... | € 2.171.640 | 2025 | Details |
Dispersals, resilience, and innovation in Late Pleistocene SE AfricaDISPERSALS aims to investigate early Homo sapiens migration dynamics from southern Africa, using archaeological and genetic methods to understand human dispersal patterns over 100,000 years. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.500.000 | 2023 | Details |
Tracking the dispersal of Homo sapiens into the Levant and across wider EurasiaThis project aims to uncover the history of modern human dispersal from Africa through advanced sediment DNA analysis at Ksar Akil, enhancing understanding of human evolution and environmental changes. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.944.654 | 2025 | Details |
Why late earliest occupation of Western Europe ?The LATEUROPE project investigates the delayed occupation of Western Europe by early hominins through interdisciplinary research, modeling, and fieldwork to understand environmental and cognitive factors. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.558.250 | 2023 | Details |
Pliocene Hominin Dispersal to southern Africa: Choice or Chance?
This project investigates the evolutionary adaptability of early hominins in South Africa through geomorphological, palaeoecological, and fossil analyses to understand their dispersal and diversity.
Palaeoenvironments of Human Behavioural Evolution in Africa
PIONEER aims to enhance understanding of early human behavioral evolution by integrating high-resolution climate data with archaeological records to test hypotheses on climate's role in behavioral complexity.
Dispersals, resilience, and innovation in Late Pleistocene SE Africa
DISPERSALS aims to investigate early Homo sapiens migration dynamics from southern Africa, using archaeological and genetic methods to understand human dispersal patterns over 100,000 years.
Tracking the dispersal of Homo sapiens into the Levant and across wider Eurasia
This project aims to uncover the history of modern human dispersal from Africa through advanced sediment DNA analysis at Ksar Akil, enhancing understanding of human evolution and environmental changes.
Why late earliest occupation of Western Europe ?
The LATEUROPE project investigates the delayed occupation of Western Europe by early hominins through interdisciplinary research, modeling, and fieldwork to understand environmental and cognitive factors.