학술논문

Ten millennia without the Levallois technique: primary knapping methods in Initial Upper Paleolithic industries at the Ushbulak site, eastern Kazakhstan.
Document Type
Article
Source
Archaeological & Anthropological Sciences. Oct2022, Vol. 14 Issue 10, p1-20. 20p.
Subject
Language
ISSN
1866-9557
Abstract
The appearance of Upper Paleolithic techniques of blade production is the key signal of Initial Upper Paleolithic (IUP) industries throughout Eurasia and, particularly, in Central Asia. Here, we present the results of a detailed reconstruction of the principal knapping method targeting blade production at the Ushbulak site in eastern Kazakhstan that currently marks the southwestern extent of the distribution of Asian IUP industries. Based on the typology of IUP cores at Ushbulak, we carried out experimental blade production using three main knapping methods that have been described in IUP complexes across northern Eurasia. Each technique was applied to the production of blades and core management elements morphologically similar to artifacts from the Ushbulak assemblage. Experimental approaches and attribute analysis established the dominance of the sub-prismatic bidirectional laminar method, based on well-prepared pre-core knapping. The reconstructed bidirectional method for blade production reflects traits in common with Moravian Bohunician IUP complexes, but the closest analogies can be found in IUP complexes of the Russian Altai Region (Kara Bom) and Mongolia (Tolbor 4). The most pronounced traits distinguishing the Ushbulak IUP industries from those of neighboring regions are the dominance of only one method of bidirectional blade production and the absence of Levallois technology. No changes in primary knapping methods and tool assemblages were revealed in Ushbulak IUP complexes over a period of roughly 10,000 years. This industry first appeared in its complete form in eastern Kazakhstan ca. 49–47 ka and existed without detectable changes until its disappearance ca. 37–35 ka. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]