Diepkloof Rock Shelter (MSA - Late HP)
Basic information
Sample name: Diepkloof Rock Shelter (MSA - Late HP)

Reference: T. E. Steele and R. G. Klein. 2013. The Middle and Later Stone Age faunal remains from Diepkloof Rock Shelter, Western Cape, South Africa. Journal of Archaeological Science 40(9):3453-3462 [ER 3775]
Geography
Country: South Africa

State: Western Cape



Coordinate: 32° 23' 12" S, 18° 27' 10" E
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Time interval: Late Pleistocene

Section: 3775

Unit number: 3

Unit order: above to below

Ma: 0.052

Age basis: OSL

Geography comments: "Diepkloof Rock Shelter is located about 180 km north of Cape Town in the Western Cape Province of South Africa. It faces northeastwards atop an isolated outcrop of quartzitic sandstone, 120 m above the southern bank of the Verlorevlei River, which flows into the Atlantic Ocean about 14 km to the northwest".
"The Late-HP deposits have been OSL dated to 52 ± 5 ka".

Environment
Lithology: not described

Taphonomic context: bird accumulation,human accumulation,rock shelter

Archaeology: hearths,stone tools

Habitat comments: "The shelter floor measures 25 m across the mouth and 17–22 m from dripline to rear wall. It is largely surrounded by fallen boulders that provide about 200 sq m of protected space. The MSA deposits reach a depth of about 3.1 m and comprise approximately 160 named stratigraphic units (SUs) that suggest persistent utilization with minimal significant hiatuses. Bone, shell, and well-preserved charcoal occur more or less throughout. Differences in artifact [stone tool] typology and technology have been used to group the SUs into nine complexes". These include an uncharacterized Lower MSA deposit, the technologically distinct "MSA-Mike", "Pre-Still Bay Lynn", "Still Bay", and "MSA-Jack" deposits, three "Howiesons Poort" (HP) deposits (Early, Intermediate, Late), and a "Post-HP" deposit.
"Humans likely introduced the bones of most larger animals, while raptors probably introduced many bones from smaller species, especially hares, dune mole rats, and hyraxes. The low density of lithic material and micro-stratigraphic analysis of the deepest deposits supports a minimal role for humans in accumulating these materials".

Methods
Life forms: carnivores,primates,rodents,ungulates,marine mammals,other large mammals,other small mammals

Sampling methods: quarry,screenwash

Sample size: 384 specimens

Years: 1973 -

Sampling comments: "The excavators divided the shelter surface into 1 × 1 m squares, most of which were further divided into quadrants. They excavated with small trowels and brushes and removed the deposit according to the natural stratigraphy. From 1998, finds with a dimension of >20 mm were assigned individual numbers and plotted in three dimensions. Smaller finds were recovered by square or quadrant from 5-mm mesh screens".

Metadata
Sample number: 4064

Contributor: Benjamin Carter

Enterer: Benjamin Carter

Created: 2023-02-17 13:34:29

Modified: 2023-05-30 04:08:10

Abundance distribution
23 species
4 singletons
total count 384
geometric series index: 37.4
Fisher's α: 5.369
geometric series k: 0.7780
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.5582
Shannon's H: 1.5186
Good's u: 0.9896
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
Register
Leporidae indet.250
Bathyergus suillus12
Hystrix africaeaustralis315 kg browser
Papio ursinus220 kg
Homo sapiens164 kg
Canis mesomelas87.9 kg carnivore
Herpestes pulverulentus2787 g
"Galerella pulverulenta"
Felis lybica16
"Felis silvestris lybica", also 15 Felinae indet. "Caracal and/or serval"
Panthera pardus333 kg carnivore
Hyaenidae indet.1
Arctocephalus pusillus2
Procavia capensis422.8 kg browser
Equus capensis5
also 8 Equus spp.
Rhinocerotidae indet.9
Hippopotamus amphibius31107 kg grazer
Taurotragus oryx5393 kg browser-grazer
Hippotragus leucophaeus1
Alcelaphinae indet.4
"wildebeest and/or hartebeest"
Pelea capreolus316 kg grazer
Redunca arundinum4 grazer
Oreotragus oreotragus5 browser-grazer
Raphicerus campestris29.7 kg browser-grazer
also 14 Raphicerus sp.
Syncerus antiquus1
"Pelorovis antiquus", also 602 Bovidae indet.