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description <p>The Middle Stone Age (earlier upper Pleistocene) sites of Die Kelders Cave I and Klasies River Mouth Cave I, southern Cape Province, South Africa, have provided faunal assemblages which imply that Middle Stone Age peoples were exploiting local resources less effectively than Later Stone Age (later upper Pleistocene-Holocene) peoples in the same area. The age structure of the Pelorovis (giant buffalo) herd in the Klasies site suggests that Middle Stone Age hunters may have been responsible for initiating a decline in the species' abundance that culminated in its final disappearance 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.</p>
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imprint American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1975
imprint_str_mv American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1975
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spelling Klein, Richard G. 0036-8075 1095-9203 American Association for the Advancement of Science Reports https://www.jstor.org/stable/1740058 <p>The Middle Stone Age (earlier upper Pleistocene) sites of Die Kelders Cave I and Klasies River Mouth Cave I, southern Cape Province, South Africa, have provided faunal assemblages which imply that Middle Stone Age peoples were exploiting local resources less effectively than Later Stone Age (later upper Pleistocene-Holocene) peoples in the same area. The age structure of the Pelorovis (giant buffalo) herd in the Klasies site suggests that Middle Stone Age hunters may have been responsible for initiating a decline in the species' abundance that culminated in its final disappearance 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.</p> Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth Science
spellingShingle Klein, Richard G., Science, Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth, Reports
title Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth
title_full Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth
title_fullStr Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth
title_full_unstemmed Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth
title_short Middle Stone Age Man-Animal Relationships in Southern Africa: Evidence from Die Kelders and Klasies River Mouth
title_sort middle stone age man-animal relationships in southern africa: evidence from die kelders and klasies river mouth
topic Reports
url https://www.jstor.org/stable/1740058