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Previous Page Back to Project Gallery $QWLTXLW\ Vol 79 No 305 September 2005 $0LGGOH3DODHROLWKLFVLWHZLWKEODGHWHFKQRORJ\DW$O7LZD\UDW4HQD 8SSHU(J\SW 3LHUUH09HUPHHUVFK3KLOLS9DQ3HHU9HHUOH5RWV During the 1990 survey by the Belgian Middle Egypt Prehistoric Project of Leuven University, we discovered a Palaeolithic site on top of a hill (figure 1). It was only during the 2003 campaign that we were able to visit the site again. As an important artefact concentration was found, we organised a simple survey with a single small trench. There was no time for a systematic excavation. The site proved to have suffered very extensive destruction by recent quarrying activities, but still some important observations could be made. *HRPRUSKRORJ\DQGVWUDWLJUDSK\ The site is part of the terrace landscape (figure 2) rising out of the floodplain near the village of Al Tiwayrat on the left bank of the Nile, south-west of the Dandara temple near Qena in upper Egypt (26°6.50' NL, 32°43.65' EL), just north of the Taramsa 8 site (Van Peer HWDO in press). The new desert road passes at the foot of the hill. The hill is flat and covered with a thin gravel layer, consisting mainly of rounded chert cobbles. The gravel thins out towards the West. When compared to the surface of the Taramsa 8 site, the colour of the surface of the Al Tiwayrat site (figures 2 & 3) is much lighter. This observation might suggest that the surface of Taramsa 8 is much older than the surface of the Al Tiwayrat site. )LJXUH Satellite image with position of the Al Tiwayrat site (long arrow) and Taramsa 8 (short arrow). Satellite imagery provided courtesy GlobeXplorer.com and Partners. Copyright [2004]. All rights reserved. Click to enlarge. pagina 1 van 10 Antiquity, Project Gallery: Vermeersch, Van Peer & Rots 10-4-2006 file://C:\Documents and Settings\u0003812\Mijn documenten\EGYPTE\LITERATU\Eigen werk\Antiquity, Project Gallery Vermeersch, ...
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VERMEERSCH P.M., VAN PEER P. & ROTS V. 2005. A Middle Palaeolithic site with blade technology at Al Tiwayrat, Qena, upper Egypt. Antiquity e-publishing. 79: 1-7.

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Page 1: VERMEERSCH P.M., VAN PEER P. & ROTS V. 2005. A Middle Palaeolithic site with blade technology at Al Tiwayrat, Qena, upper Egypt. Antiquity e-publishing. 79: 1-7.

Previous Page Back to Project Gallery

$QWLTXLW\ Vol 79 No 305 September 2005

$�0LGGOH�3DODHROLWKLF�VLWH�ZLWK�EODGH�WHFKQRORJ\�DW�$O�7LZD\UDW��4HQD��8SSHU�(J\SW��

3LHUUH�0��9HUPHHUVFK��3KLOLS�9DQ�3HHU��9HHUOH�5RWV�During the 1990 survey by the Belgian Middle Egypt Prehistoric Project of Leuven University, we discovered a Palaeolithic site on top of a hill (figure 1). It was only during the 2003 campaign that we were able to visit the site again. As an important artefact concentration was found, we organised a simple survey with a single small trench. There was no time for a systematic excavation. The site proved to have suffered very extensive destruction by recent quarrying activities, but still some important observations could be made.

*HRPRUSKRORJ\�DQG�VWUDWLJUDSK\ The site is part of the terrace landscape (figure 2) rising out of the floodplain near the village of Al Tiwayrat on the left bank of the Nile, south-west of the Dandara temple near Qena in upper Egypt (26°6.50' NL, 32°43.65' EL), just north of the Taramsa 8 site (Van Peer HW�DO� in press). The new desert road passes at the foot of the hill. The hill is flat and covered with a thin gravel layer, consisting mainly of rounded chert cobbles. The gravel thins out towards the West. When compared to the surface of the Taramsa 8 site, the colour of the surface of the Al Tiwayrat site (figures 2 & 3) is much lighter. This observation might suggest that the surface of Taramsa 8 is much older than the surface of the Al Tiwayrat site.

)LJXUH����Satellite image with position of the Al Tiwayrat site (long arrow) and Taramsa 8 (short arrow).

Satellite imagery provided courtesy GlobeXplorer.com and Partners. Copyright [2004]. All rights reserved. Click to enlarge.

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Page 2: VERMEERSCH P.M., VAN PEER P. & ROTS V. 2005. A Middle Palaeolithic site with blade technology at Al Tiwayrat, Qena, upper Egypt. Antiquity e-publishing. 79: 1-7.

)LJXUH����Arrow indicating the position of Al Tiwayrat, viewed from the south (Taramsa 8) and the entirely destroyed surface of the site

The surface of the hill is entirely disturbed by all kinds of diggings, apparently by local people in search for fine gravel for building purposes. The pits often reach the Pliocene silts below the gravel cover. The gravels are mainly oval light-brown chert cobbles of quite good knapping quality. Dump heaps are scattered over the whole hill surface. On the surface of the south-eastern part of the hill, there is a 80 sq. m badly disturbed concentration of large chert artefacts, which we sampled. Artefacts from this concentration bear the typical brown desert patina (figure 4) but some lack this patina suggesting that they have been removed recently from their original position inside the terrace deposits. Inside the concentration and below a recent dump heap, we cleared a profile in which some material could be found in apparently undisturbed position. The cleared surface is small, about 1.5 sq. m.

The profile (figure 3) from top down is as follows: below the desert pavement with mainly numerous chert cobbles, a 20-30cm thick layer of reddish yellow fine sand (7.5YR 7/6) is present. The sand is quite well consolidated by calcite. Some rare chert cobble fragments are

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present. The deposit contains very fresh unpatinated artefacts (figure 3), mainly at its base but also scattered inside the sand. Some artefacts are in a horizontal position whereas others are placed vertically. Several artefacts were refitted in the field, suggesting that they did not undergo important postdepositional horizontal disturbances. The sand with the artefacts is resting on a somewhat more intensely coloured reddish yellow (5YR 6/6) granular quartz sand with a pavement of entirely fragmented chert cobbles. Fragmentation of the gravels from this horizon occurred LQ�VLWX as the fragmented cobbles have preserved their original position. Below, there is an accumulation of chert cobbles belonging to the terrace deposits. At the location of the profile, terrace gravels form only a thin layer.

7KH�OLWKLFV The very restricted survey (table 1) provided a collection of extremely fresh artefacts (figure 3). In addition to the LQ� VLWX artefacts we also collected some artefacts from the immediate surrounding of our survey profile, which apparently belong to the same assemblage (figure 4). Some of them have no patina and are very fresh, whereas others have the typical brown-black desert patina.

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)LJXUH��� The profile with at its base a concentration of artefacts

Opposed platform cores 4Nubian core 1Blade crests 5Blades 40Cortical flakes 22Flakes 138Chips 57Foliate fragment 1

7RWDO� ���7DEOH��� Artefact inventory

)LJXUH����Artefacts collected at the surface

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The large cobbles of a light-brown good quality chert from the terrace deposits have been used as raw material. The prehistoric humans apparently preferred large oblong cobbles, 20 - 25cm in length. After decortication, they produced elongated blades from opposed platform cores (figure 5: 1-2, 4-5). Lateral preparation of the core was applied producing crests (figure 5: 7-8). The preparation consisted mainly of large flake removals whereas secondary fine preparation remained very restricted. Such an approach is also evident in the limited number of chips that were found in the profile survey. Apparently both opposed platforms were used alternatively in a similar way (figure 6: 10). The cores attest the production of very robust blades, most often with a thick bulb, which suggests the use of a hard hammer. Blades often have a rectangular shape (figure 5: 11; 6: 1-3, 8-12, 19-20), a result of the alternative flaking from both opposed platforms on cores that generally have parallel sides. Sometimes they have pointed distal ends (6: 4-5, 7, 15-16, 23). Blades were obtained in a continuous reduction without intermediate reshaping of the core as can be learned from the refitted blades (figure 6: 1-2). Blades are 10 to 20cm long, generally 2 to 4cm wide, often with a trapezoidal cross-section, and mostly 1 to 2cm thick. The butt is generally flat, sometimes dihedral or facetted. Levallois technology is missing with the exception of a single Nubian type 1 core in quartz (figure 7: 6) from the surface. Some flakes show some coincidental reminiscence of Nubian debitage (figure 7: 9) or even a more classical Levallois debitage (figure 7: 2 & 4). Tools have not been found, except a fragment of an unpatinated bifacial foliate (figure 7: 1). Fine regular retouches that ’smooth’ the edges are absent.

,QWHUSUHWDWLRQ�DQG�FRQFOXVLRQ In the light of our experience with similar sites in Egypt (Vermeersch 2002; Van Peer & Vermeersch in preparation) we consider the assemblage of Al Tiwayrat as the result of a chert extraction activity, which produced large artefact concentrations in pits or just beside extraction pits. The artefacts were left on the surface and were

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)LJXUH��� 1-2, 4-5: Opposed platform cores for blades; 3: blade; 6: elongated flake, 7-8: core crest; 9-11: blades

subsequently integrated in aeolian sand. Here, the aeolian sand is not very thick suggesting that this locality is just outside a possible extraction pit. Similar situations occur at Nazlet Sabaha and at Taramsa 1 (and many other places in the area). The deposition of the artefacts is contemporaneous with an aeolian accumulation, which has been affected by rubification and calcitic consolidation. Such conditions often refer to a deposit that was subjected to interglacial conditions. Indeed, aeolian sand, not subjected to such pedogenesis, often has colours such as light yellowish brown (10YR 7/4). We therefore suggest that the age of the assemblage is somewhere in the Last Interglacial.

The presence of a blade technology might tempt us to correlate the assemblage from Al Tiwayrat with assemblages from the Upper Palaeolithic such as the Shuwikhatian (Vermeersch HW�DO� 2000). The technical approach is however entirely different. The blade technology of Al Tiwayrat might seem to have a better fit with the Taramsan approach (Vermeersch HW�DO� 1997, 2000). Still, we feel that the blade technology of Al Tiwayrat is technically less developed.

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)LJXUH��� 1-2 Refitting blades; 3-24: blades

Typologically, the foliate is reminiscent of the bifacial foliates that are present in early Nubian Complex assemblages such as those from Bir Tarfawi (Wendorf� HW� DO� 1993; Van Peer 1998) and from Taramsa 1 (Van Peer & Vermeersch in prep). Rose (2004) and Van Peer HW�DO� (in press) have drawn attention to typological similarities between the

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early Nubian Complex and the sub-Saharan Middle Stone Age. The bifacial foliate from Al Tiwayrat, as well as others from early Nubian Complex assemblages, are most similar to those of the Lupemban industry, although they also occur in the Sangoan of western Africa (Clark 2001). Technologically as well, this assemblage evidences Lupemban features, such as the use of a blade reduction system, similar to the one documented in the Siszya Lupemban at Kalambo Falls (Clark 2001). In addition, Nubian Levallois methods for points begin to be modestly represented and this provides an obvious link with the early Nubian Complex.

Although the lithic assemblage recovered from the exploitation site at Al Tiwayrat is small, we are tempted, also taking into account the stratigraphic data, to associate the lithic assemblage with a rather old Middle Palaeolithic or Middle Stone Age of Egypt and Northern Sudan (Van Peer HW� DO� 2003). Typical for this assemblage is the association of a blade technology with foliates.

$FNQRZOHGJPHQWV We would like to thank the following persons and institutions who assisted us in our work: Hakim Ahmed, inspector of the Antiquities Department, L. Ponzetta, L. Van Kerckhoven, the Netherlands Flemish Institute in Cairo and FWO-Vlaanderen.

)LJXUH��� 1: Foliate fragment; 2 Levallois flake; 3-5, 7-9: blades; 6: Nubian core (quartz)

5HIHUHQFHV

� CLARK, J.D. 2001. .DODPER�)DOOV�3UHKLVWRULF�6LWH��9ROXPH�,,,. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

� ROSE J.I. 2004. New evidence for the expansion of an Upper Pleistocene population out of East Africa, from the site of Station One,

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3UHYLRXV�3DJH�

+RPH�_�2QOLQH�$UFKLYH�_�3URMHFW�*DOOHU\�_�)$4V�

Northern Sudan. &DPEULGJH�$UFKDHRORJLFDO�-RXUQDO 14: 205-16.

� VAN PEER, P. 1998. The River Nile corridor and Out of Africa: an examination of the archaeological record. &XUUHQW�$QWKURSRORJ\ 39: 115-40.

� VAN PEER, P., R. FULLAGAR, S. STOKES, R.M. BAILEY, J. MOEYERSONS, F. STEENHOUDT, A. GEERTS, T. VANDERBEKEN, M. DE DAPPER & F. GEUS. 2003. The Early to Middle Stone Age transition and the emergence of modern human behaviour at site 8-B-11, Sai Island, Sudan -RXUQDO�RI�+XPDQ�(YROXWLRQ 45: 187-93.

� VAN PEER P., V. ROTS & P. M. VERMEERSCH. in press. A wasted effort at the quarry: wear analysis and interpretation of an MSA lanceolate point from Taramsa-8, Egypt. 3DOHR$QWKURSRORJ\.

� VAN PEER, P., P.M. VERMEERSCH & E. PAULISSEN. 2002. Chert quarrying in the Nazlet Safaha area, in P.M. Vermeersch (ed.) 3DODHROLWKLF�4XDUU\LQJ�6LWHV�LQ�8SSHU�DQG�0LGGOH�(J\SW: 139-210. Leuven: Leuven University Press.

� VAN PEER, P. & P.M. VERMEERSCH. in preparation. 3DODHROLWKLF�4XDUU\LQJ�6LWHV�DQG�D�+XPDQ�%XULDO�LQ�WKH�7DUDPVD�$UHD��8SSHU�(J\SW. Leuven: Leuven University Press.

� VERMEERSCH P. M., E. PAULISSEN & P. VAN PEER. 2000. Shuwikhat 1, an Upper Palaeolithic site, in P.M. Vermeersch (ed.) 3DODHROLWKLF�/LYLQJ�6LWHV�LQ�8SSHU�DQG�0LGGOH�(J\SW: 111-58. Leuven: Leuven University Press

� VERMEERSCH P.M. & P. VAN PEER 2002. Conclusions on the Palaeolithic chert extraction in Egypt, in P.M. Vermeersch (ed.) 3DODHROLWKLF�/LYLQJ�6LWHV�LQ�8SSHU�DQG�0LGGOH�(J\SW: 353-62. Leuven: Leuven University Press.

� VERMEERSCH P.M., E. PAULISSEN, S. STOKES, P. VAN PEER, M. DE BIE, F. STEENHOUDT & S. MISSOTTEN. 1997. Middle Palaeolithic chert mining in Egypt, in A. Ramos-Milan & M-A. Bustillo (ed.) 6LOLFHRXV�5RFNV�DQG�&XOWXUH: 173-94. Granada: Universidad de Granada.

� WENDORF, F., R. SCHILD, A.E. CLOSE & Associates. 1993.�(J\SW�GXULQJ�WKH�/DVW�,QWHUJODFLDO��WKH�0LGGOH�3DOHROLWKLF�RI�%LU�7DUIDZL�DQG�%LU�6DKDUD�(DVW� New York: Plenum Press.

3LHUUH� 0�� 9HUPHHUVFK� �FRUUHVSRQGLQJ� DXWKRU��� 3KLOLS� 9DQ� 3HHU�� 9HHUOH� 5RWV� Prehistoric Archaeology Unit, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Redingenstraat 16, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium (Email: [email protected]).

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