Scientific Reports (Mar 2022)

A late Middle Pleistocene Middle Stone Age sequence identified at Wadi Lazalim in southern Tunisia

  • Emanuele Cancellieri,
  • Hedi Bel Hadj Brahim,
  • Jaafar Ben Nasr,
  • Tarek Ben Fraj,
  • Ridha Boussoffara,
  • Martina Di Matteo,
  • Norbert Mercier,
  • Marwa Marnaoui,
  • Andrea Monaco,
  • Maïlys Richard,
  • Guido S. Mariani,
  • Olivier Scancarello,
  • Andrea Zerboni,
  • Savino di Lernia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07816-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The late Middle Pleistocene, starting at around 300 ka, witnessed large-scale biological and cultural dynamics in hominin evolution across Africa including the onset of the Middle Stone Age that is closely associated with the evolution of our species—Homo sapiens. However, archaeological and geochronological data of its earliest appearance are scarce. Here we report on the late Middle Pleistocene sequence of Wadi Lazalim, in the Sahara of Southern Tunisia, which has yielded evidence for human occupations bracketed between ca. 300–130 ka. Wadi Lazalim contributes valuable information on the spread of early MSA technocomplexes across North Africa, that likely were an expression of large-scale diffusion processes.