Authors
José M Capriles, Juan Albarracin-Jordan, Umberto Lombardo, Daniela Osorio, Blaine Maley, Steven T Goldstein, Katherine A Herrera, Michael D Glascock, Alejandra I Domic, Heinz Veit, Calogero M Santoro
Publication date
2016/4/1
Journal
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Volume
6
Pages
463-474
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The high Andes of South America were among the last environments that Homo sapiens colonized during its Pleistocene dispersion out of Africa. The peopling of this high-elevation environment was constrained by atmospheric hypoxia, cold stress, and resource availability. Here we report archaeological and geoarchaeological analyses from Cueva Bautista, a dry rock shelter, located at 3933 m above sea level in southwestern Bolivia. We focus on a well-preserved occupation surface containing hearths and high-quality stone tools AMS dated to 12,700–12,100 cal BP. Geoarchaeological resolution of the site supports its stratigraphic integrity and archaeological analyses indicate that the early human occupation was formed as a temporary camp by mobile foragers relying on a curated technological strategy. Regional paleoenvironmental reconstructions suggest that Cueva Bautista's occupation was synchronous …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JM Capriles, J Albarracin-Jordan, U Lombardo… - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2016