Abstract

Humans have had a major impact on the environment. This has been particularly intense in the last millennium but has been noticeable since the development of food production and the associated higher population densities in the last 10,000 years. The use of fire and over-exploitation of large mammals has also been recognized as having an effect on the world’s ecology, going back perhaps 100,000 years or more. Here we report on an earlier anthropogenic environmental change. The use of stone tools, which dates back over 2.5 million years, and the subsequent evolution of a technologically-dependent lineage required the exploitation of very large quantities of rock. However, measures of the impact of hominin stone exploitation are rare and inherently difficult. The Messak Settafet, a sandstone massif in the Central Sahara (Libya), is littered with Pleistocene stone tools on an unprecedented scale and is, in effect, a man-made landscape. Surveys showed that parts of the Messak Settafet have as much as 75 lithics per square metre and that this fractured debris is a dominant element of the environment. The type of stone tools—Acheulean and Middle Stone Age—indicates that extensive stone tool manufacture occurred over the last half million years or more. The lithic-strewn pavement created by this ancient stone tool manufacture possibly represents the earliest human environmental impact at a landscape scale and is an example of anthropogenic change. The nature of the lithics and inferred age may suggest that hominins other than modern humans were capable of unintentionally modifying their environment. The scale of debris also indicates the significance of stone as a critical resource for hominins and so provides insights into a novel evolutionary ecology.

Highlights

  • Humans have had and continue to have an enormous impact on the environment [1], to the extent that they are influencing the climate itself

  • For substantial phases of the Pleistocene, part of this landscape was used and fundamentally modified by hominin activities associated with stone tool production

  • We know that there is abundant evidence for the presence of hominins in the Sahara from the Lower Pleistocene onwards. This relates both to the area as a route for dispersals beyond sub-Saharan Africa, and a place that may have been highly habitable during the wetter phases of the last million years [45,46,47,48]

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Summary

Introduction

Humans have had and continue to have an enormous impact on the environment [1], to the extent that they are influencing the climate itself. We elaborate on the nature of this first level of human impact on the environment and use a vast landscape in the Central Sahara (Fazzan, Libya), where the surface is extensively made up of man-made lithics, to explore the extent to which this may have occurred. The particular visibility of lithics in denuded landscapes, such as the Central Sahara, allows us to assess the extent of the human impact in the area. It throws light on the long-term ecological effects of stone-tool making by hominins, one of the earliest forms of anthropogenic environmental change

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