Palaeolithic and Bifacial Industries of Vietnam in Comparison with Those in East, Southeast, and South Asia

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Tác giả: A.P. Derevianko, A.V. Kandyba, Khac Su Nguyen

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: Vietnam Social Sciences, 2020

Mô tả vật lý: tr.15

Bộ sưu tập: Báo, Tạp chí

ID: 334584

This study investigates the origin of bifacial lithic industry in the Lower Palaeolithic of Southeast Asia. We describe stone tools from the stratified sites of Go Da and Roc Tung near the town of An Khe, Vietnam. The lithics represent a homogeneous industry, characterised by Lower Palaeolithic primary and secondary reduction techniques. Cores and tools were made using pebbles, and some tools were manufactured on flakes. The tool-kit includes bifaces, picks, spurred implements, carinated end-scrapers, various types of side-scrapers, choppers and chopping tools, and denticulate and notched pieces. Bifaces and picks are the predominant tool types. Primary reduction was aimed at manufacturing simple pebble cores with cortex striking platforms, while radial and orthogonal cores occur less frequently. Tektites found with the lithics were dated by 40K/38Ar-method to 806 ± 22 and 782 ± 20ka BP. We propose to name this industry the An Khe culture. We suggest that the An Khe emerged through convergent evolution of the pebble-flake industry associated with the first wave of Homo erectus migration from Africa 1.8-1.6 Ma years ago, and is unrelated to the Acheulean tradition introduced by the second wave of migration to Eurasia.
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