Abstract

The interplay between Pleistocene climatic variability and hominin adaptations to diverse terrestrial ecosystems is a key topic in human evolutionary studies. Early and Middle Pleistocene environmental change and its relation to hominin behavioural responses has been a subject of great interest in Africa and Europe, though little information is available for other key regions of the Old World, particularly from Eastern Asia. Here we examine key Early Pleistocene sites of the Nihewan Basin, in high-latitude northern China, dating between ∼1.4 and 1.0 million years ago (Ma). We compare stone-tool assemblages from three Early Pleistocene sites in the Nihewan Basin, including detailed assessment of stone-tool refitting sequences at the ∼1.1-Ma-old site of Cenjiawan. Increased toolmaking skills and technological innovations are evident in the Nihewan Basin at the onset of the Mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition (MPT). Examination of the lithic technology of the Nihewan sites, together with an assessment of other key Palaeolithic sites of China, indicates that toolkits show increasing diversity at the outset of the MPT and in its aftermath. The overall evidence indicates the adaptive flexibility of early hominins to ecosystem changes since the MPT, though regional abandonments are also apparent in high latitudes, likely owing to cold and oscillating environmental conditions. The view presented here sharply contrasts with traditional arguments that stone-tool technologies of China are homogeneous and continuous over the course of the Early Pleistocene.

Highlights

  • Pleistocene stone tool industries, those from China, have traditionally been considered a homogenous and long-lasting technological tradition

  • Magnetostratigraphic dating results showed that the Cenjiawan artefact layer is just posterior to the Punaruu geomagnetic excursion [30], which has an 40Ar/39Ar age determination of 1.105±0.005 million years ago (Ma) [26], with Donggutuo dating to about the same age (Fig. 1d)

  • At the 2.1 Ma old site of Shangchen (Lantian) [14] (Fig. 4d2), freehand hard hammer percussion was applied to cores along a single platform in order to produce a few flakes

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Summary

Introduction

Pleistocene stone tool industries, those from China, have traditionally been considered a homogenous and long-lasting technological tradition. To assess the degree to which early stone tool using hominins modified their tool manufacturing behaviours during the Early Pleistocene in Eastern Asia, we examined three well-known lithic sites from the Nihewan Basin in North China (Fig. 1a c) (Supplementary Note 1).

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