Around one million years ago, early humans were skilful at using the landscape features of the Kenyan Rift to ambush and kill their prey, according to new research published in Scientific Reports.
The area was a popular grazing site for larger animals (e.g., giant gelada baboons, elephants, hippopotami and the spotted hyenas) due to its locally high nutrient levels and the presence of an ancient freshwater lake, together with the relative lack of dangerous predators, such as lions.
An interdisciplinary team of anthropologists and earth scientists have shown that animal movements were constrained to particular pathways due to the restrictions imposed by the landscape. Early humans became adept at predicting these pathways enabling them to ambush large and dangerous animals as evidenced by the butchered remains present at the site, in association with numerous stone tools.
Previous discoveries in the Olorgesailie region of the Kenyan Rift include a large number of Acheulean hand axes, associated with the butchery of large mammals and indicated that the area was well populated with hominins, who returned to the site repeatedly.
The region looks significantly different today than it would have done a million years ago due to a combination of climate changes, earthquakes and volcanism. However, the research teams were able to adjust for the effects of fault motion, making corrections for erosion and the deposit of sediment, to create a model of the ancient landscape and show how our ancestors could have exploited it.
BU's Dr Sally Reynolds, lead researcher in the UK, explains how innovative modelling methods enabled the team to make their discoveries, “By reconstructing the topographic setting in the area and examining the trace nutrients in soils there now and interviewing local Maasai leaders about current animal grazing activities, we were able to build up a picture of animal movements around one million years ago.”
Explaining why the landscape of the area a million years ago would have been conducive to ambush-based hunting techniques, Dr Reynolds said, “The Olorgesailie region was particularly well placed for ambushing larger animals because the landscape limited the routes taken by those animals as they travelled through the area. Areas of higher elevation provided excellent lookout points as well.
"There was also good access to reliable drinking water and a ready supply of workable stone for the creation of hunting tools, making it an ideal location for hominin occupation.”
The work provides a new and exciting landscape-based framework in which to evaluate this and other hominin sites and as such will change the way we interpret our ancestral record.
The work was carried out by researchers from Bournemouth University, Ludwig Maximilians University, the Kenyan National Agricultural Research Laboratory and the National Museums of Kenya and Institute de Physique du Globe de Paris, and in collaboration with the University of York as a part of the European Research Council (ERC) EU DISPERSE Grant.