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Technical Comments
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| 1. |
R. G. Roberts,
et al.,
Science
292,
1888
(2001)
|
| 2. | D. Gillieson and M. Mountain, Archaeol. Oceania 18, 53 (1983) . |
| 3. | J. Field and J. Dodson, Proc. Prehist. Soc. 65, 275 (1999) . |
| 4. | J. Dodson, et al., Archaeol. Oceania 28, 94 (1993) . |
| 5. | J. Field, J. Dodson, I. Prosser, Quat. Sci. Rev., in press. |
| 6. | J. Furby, thesis, University of New South Wales (1995). |
| 7. | J. Dodson and R. V. S. Wright, Quat. Res. 32, 182 (1989) . |
Response: To minimize the risk of dating deposits containing reworked megafaunal remains, we concentrated on sites with articulated bones (1). This approach does not necessarily exclude all archaeological sites from consideration [e.g. (2, 3)]. Many animals also died through causes other than human predation, and some of their remains would have been preserved in primary deposition at nonarchaeological sites. But we found no articulated elements younger than about 46 ka in our continent-wide survey, and Miller et al. (4) found no Genyornis eggshells younger than this in central or southeastern Australia. Both studies included the Murray-Darling Basin, where Cuddie Springs is situated, so the claimed survival of megafauna to 35,000-28,000 radiocarbon years ago [about 41 to 33 ka (5)] at this site (6) requires scrutiny.
There is no direct evidence that humans interacted with megafauna at Cuddie Springs. The disarticulated remains do not show extensive predepositional fragmentation or evidence of selection of the most important meat- and marrow-bearing elements [compare to (2)], and the cut marks on bone relate to an extant species of kangaroo (6). But considerable evidence exists for postdepositional disturbance of the human/megafauna units (5, 6a, and 6b). Some bones are oriented vertically, and many exhibit signs of postdepositional crushing, attributed to trampling (6). Field and Dodson also acknowledged that some megafaunal elements are probably intrusive (6), and the single-grain optical ages indicate some intrusion of sediments after 36 ka (1). The variable degree of bone mineralization (6) and extensive degradation of proteins in the skeletal remains (7, 8) also cast doubt on the entire assemblage dating to only 41 to 33 ka. We interpret the megafaunal material in the human/megafauna units as a lag deposit, sourced from older bone-bearing sediments. Such sediments underlie the lowest cultural levels, with a stratigraphic break in the critical period between >76 and 41 ka (6). We propose that the sediments deposited during this period were mostly removed by wind or water, while the bones were concentrated and incorporated in sediments deposited after 41 ka. The optical dating signal in sediments is reset upon exposure to sunlight, so optical ages greater than 41 ka would be obtained only if the grains had been incompletely bleached.
Pollen from the human/megafauna units can reveal little about any climatic trends leading up to the LGM (23 to 19 ka), because these units were mostly deposited between 41 and 33 ka (6). The evidence for subsequent disturbance provided by optical dating (1) need not be reproduced in the pollen data, because each unit may have been contaminated by pollen of similar composition. There is a stratigraphic break of at least 9 ka with the overlying deposits, which accumulated after 24 ka (6). These deposits could contain pollen of LGM age, but the incoherent pattern of 14C ages and the presence of glass flakes and modern cow bone above the contact with unit 5 (6) indicate that the pollen record is insensitive to substantial postdepositional disturbance.
Reliable ages for the disarticulated remains at Cuddie Springs and Nombe Rockshelter can be determined only by direct dating, such as that used at Lancefield Swamp to revise the age of the disarticulated assemblage from 31 ka to about 50 ka (8, 9).
Richard G. Roberts
Hiroyuki Yoshida
School of Geosciences
University of
Wollongong
Wollongong, New South Wales 2522,
Australia
E-mail:
rgrob{at}uow.edu.au
Timothy F. Flannery
South Australian Museum
Adelaide, South Australia 5000, Australia
Linda K. Ayliffe
Department of Geology and Geophysics
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA
Jon M. Olley
CSIRO Land and Water
Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
Gavin J. Prideaux
Department of Earth Sciences
University of California
Riverside, CA 92521, USA
Geoff M. Laslett
CSIRO Mathematical and
Information Sciences
Melbourne,
Victoria 3168, Australia
Alexander Baynes
Western Australian Museum
Perth, Western Australia 6000, Australia
M. A. Smith
National
Museum of Australia
Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
Rhys Jones
Department of Archaeology
and
Natural History
Research School of Pacific and
Asian
Studies
Australian National University
Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Barton L. Smith
Department of Earth Sciences
La Trobe University
Melbourne,
Victoria 3086, Australia
| 1. | R. G. Roberts, et al., Science 292, 1888 (2001) . |
| 2. | A. J. Anderson, Prodigious Birds: Moas and Moa-Hunting in Prehistoric New Zealand (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1989). |
| 3. | D. J. Stanford, J. S. Day, Eds., Ice Age Hunters of the Rockies (Denver Museum of Natural History/University Press of Colorado, Denver, CO, 1992). |
| 4. |
G. H. Miller,
et al.,
Science
283,
205
(1999)
|
| 5. |
J. W. Beck,
et al.,
Science
292,
2453
(2001)
|
| 6. | J. Field and J. Dodson, Proc. Prehist. Soc. 65, 275 (1999) . |
| 7. | S. J. Clarke, thesis, University of Wollongong, New South Wales (1999). |
| 8. | R. Gillespie, Radiocarbon, in press. |
| 9. | S. Van Huet, R. Grün, C. V. Murray-Wallace, N. Redvers-Newton, J. P. White, Aust. Archaeol. 46, 5 (1998) . |
Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)