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Southern
African Humanities
a journal of cultural studies
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The stone artefacts from the Vredenburg Peninsular archaeological survey, west coast of South Africa
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K. Sadr & J. Gribble
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The stone artefacts and radiocarbon dates analysed from the Vredenburg Peninsular archaeological survey of 1991-92 show a 6000-year-long lithic sequence with an earlier, more formal set of assemblages and a later, more informal set. Between the two, a number of adze-rich sites seem to define a middle, or transitional phase in the local lithic sequence. This sequence suggests that the tripartite division of the pre-colonial Holocene industries on the west coast that was proposed by Jalmar Rudner in the 1960s represents a local evolution in lithic traditions.
To cite this articles: Sadr, K. & Gribble, J. in press 2010. The stone artefacts from the Vredenburg Peninsular archaeological survey, west coast of South Africa. Southern African Humanities 22: 19-88. |
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