Activities per year
Abstract
This chapter examines the relationship between the changing geomorphology of physical land forms in tectonically and volcanically active regions, topography, soil nutrients, movements of large mammals, and patterns of human subsistence and dispersal in the early stages of human evolution. We place particular emphasis on the ways in which minor topographic barriers – e.g., river gorges, fault scarps and basaltic lava flows – constrain the movements of large mammals during their seasonal migrations and offer opportunities for early human populations to ambush animals, taking advantage of predictable natural constrictions. We also emphasise the importance of soil edaphics – the mineral composition of soils as a source of trace elements essential for animal growth and health – as another key variable in determining the distribution and movements of animals and their human hunters. Soil edaphics are closely related to the nature of the underlying regolith or bedrock, and are consequently highly variable in their distribution, providing additional constraints on animal movements. We show how the combination of topographic and soil-edaphic mapping in conjunction with the observed locations of stone-tool or fossil assemblages can highlight patterns of early human behaviour, using examples from the East African and Jordanian Rifts and the Arabian margin of the Red Sea. Finally, we note that these methods have potential to be applied more widely in other regions of the world and to problems of animal and human health at the present-day
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Geological Setting, Palaeoenvironment and Archaeology of the Red Sea |
Editors | Najeeb Rasul, Ian Stewart |
Place of Publication | Cham,, Switzerland |
Publisher | Springer |
Chapter | 29 |
Pages | 653-673 |
Number of pages | 31 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9783319994086 |
ISBN (Print) | 9783319994079 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 6 Jan 2019 |
Event | Saudi Geological Survey Red Sea Workshop - Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Duration: 14 Feb 2016 → 17 Feb 2016 |
Workshop
Workshop | Saudi Geological Survey Red Sea Workshop |
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Country/Territory | Saudi Arabia |
City | Jeddah |
Period | 14/02/16 → 17/02/16 |
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Saudi Geological Survey Red Sea Workshop
Robyn Helen Inglis (Invited speaker)
14 Feb 2016 → 17 Feb 2016Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Seminar/workshop/course
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2nd Jeddah International Workshop on the Geological Setting, Oceanography and Environment of the Red Sea
Geoff Bailey (Participant)
14 Feb 2016 → 18 Feb 2016Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Conference participation
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Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities
Geoff Bailey (Researcher)
13 Jan 2015 → 27 Jan 2015Activity: Visiting an external institution › Fieldwork
Projects
- 4 Finished
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Early Stone Age Activity and Environment at Wadi Dabsa SW Saudi Arabia (Albert Reckitt Fund)
1/09/16 → 31/12/17
Project: Research project (funded) › Research
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SURFACE
Bailey, G. & Cooper Inglis, R. H.
1/01/16 → 31/08/18
Project: Research project (funded) › Research
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The Palaeolithic Occupation of the Harrat Al Birk, Southwestern Saudi Arabia
10/11/14 → 28/02/15
Project: Research project (funded) › Research