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Featured researches published by Guillaume Porraz.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

A Howiesons Poort tradition of engraving ostrich eggshell containers dated to 60,000 years ago at Diepkloof Rock Shelter, South Africa

Pierre-Jean Texier; Guillaume Porraz; John Parkington; Jean-Philippe Rigaud; Cedric Poggenpoel; Christopher Miller; Chantal Tribolo; Caroline R. Cartwright; Aude Coudenneau; Richard G. Klein; Teresa E. Steele; Christine Verna

Ongoing debates about the emergence of modern human behavior, however defined, regularly incorporate observations from the later part of the southern African Middle Stone Age and emphasize the early appearance of artifacts thought to reflect symbolic practice. Here we report a large sample of 270 fragments of intentionally marked ostrich eggshell from the Howiesons Poort at Diepkloof Rock Shelter, Western Cape, South Africa. Dating from ≈60,000 years ago, these pieces attest to an engraving tradition that is the earliest reliable evidence of what is a widespread modern practice. These abstract linear depictions were made on functional items (eggshell containers), which were curated and involved in daily hunter-gatherer life. The standardized production of repetitive patterns, including a hatched band motif, suggests a system of symbolic representation in which collective identities and individual expressions are clearly communicated, suggesting social, cultural, and cognitive underpinnings that overlap with those of modern people.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Pressure flaking to serrate bifacial points for the hunt during the MIS5 at Sibudu Cave (South Africa)

Veerle Rots; Carol Lentfer; Viola C. Schmid; Guillaume Porraz; Nicholas J. Conard

Projectile technology is considered to appear early in the southern African Middle Stone Age (MSA) and the rich and high resolution MSA sequence of Sibudu Cave in KwaZulu-Natal has provided many new insights about the use and hafting of various projectile forms. We present the results of a functional and technological analysis on a series of unpublished serrated bifacial points recently recovered from the basal deposits of Sibudu Cave. These serrated tools, which only find equivalents in the neighbouring site of Umhlatuzana, precede the Still Bay techno-complex and are older than 77 ka BP. Independent residue and use-wear analyses were performed in a phased procedure involving two separate analysts, which allowed the engagement between two separate lines of functional evidence. Thanks to the excellent preservation at Sibudu Cave, a wide range of animal, plant and mineral residues were observed in direct relation with diagnostic wear patterns. The combination of technological, wear and residue evidence allowed us to confirm that the serration was manufactured with bone compressors and that the serrated points were mounted with a composite adhesive as the tips of projectiles used in hunting activities. The suite of technological and functional data pushes back the evidence for the use of pressure flaking during the MSA and highlights the diversity of the technical innovations adopted by southern African MSA populations. We suggest the serrated points from the stratigraphic units Adam to Darya of Sibudu illustrate one important technological adaptation of the southern African MSA and provide another example of the variability of MSA bifacial technologies.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The MIS5 Pietersburg at ‘28’ Bushman Rock Shelter, Limpopo Province, South Africa

Guillaume Porraz; Aurore Val; Chantal Tribolo; Norbert Mercier; Paloma de la Peña; Magnus Mathisen Haaland; Marina Igreja; Christopher E. Miller; Viola C. Schmid

In the past few decades, a diverse array of research has emphasized the precocity of technically advanced and symbolic practices occurring during the southern African Middle Stone Age. However, uncertainties regarding the regional chrono-cultural framework constrain models and identification of the cultural and ecological mechanisms triggering the development of such early innovative behaviours. Here, we present new results and a refined chronology for the Pietersburg, a techno-complex initially defined in the late 1920’s, which has disappeared from the literature since the 1980’s. We base our revision of this techno-complex on ongoing excavations at Bushman Rock Shelter (BRS) in Limpopo Province, South Africa, where two Pietersburg phases (an upper phase called ‘21’ and a lower phase called ‘28’) are recognized. Our analysis focuses on the ‘28’ phase, characterized by a knapping strategy based on Levallois and semi-prismatic laminar reduction systems and typified by the presence of end-scrapers. Luminescence chronology provides two sets of ages for the upper and lower Pietersburg of BRS, dated respectively to 73±6ka and 75±6ka on quartz and to 91±10ka and 97±10ka on feldspar, firmly positioning this industry within MIS5. Comparisons with other published lithic assemblages show technological differences between the Pietersburg from BRS and other southern African MIS5 traditions, especially those from the Western and Eastern Cape. We argue that, at least for part of MIS5, human populations in South Africa were regionally differentiated, a process that most likely impacted the way groups were territorially and socially organized. Nonetheless, comparisons between MIS5 assemblages also indicate some typological similarities, suggesting some degree of connection between human groups, which shared similar innovations but manipulated them in different ways. We pay particular attention to the end-scrapers from BRS, which represent thus far the earliest documented wide adoption of such tool-type and provide further evidence for the innovative processes characterizing southern Africa from the MIS5 onwards.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Technological successions in the Middle Stone Age sequence of Diepkloof Rock Shelter, Western Cape, South Africa

Guillaume Porraz; Pierre-Jean Texier; Will Archer; Michel Piboule; Jean-Philippe Rigaud; Chantal Tribolo


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Heat treatment in the South African Middle Stone Age: temperature induced transformations of silcrete and their technological implications

Patrick Schmidt; Guillaume Porraz; Aneta Slodczyk; Ludovic Bellot-Gurlet; Will Archer; Christopher E. Miller


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

OSL and TL dating of the Middle Stone Age sequence at Diepkloof Rock Shelter (South Africa): a clarification

Chantal Tribolo; Norbert Mercier; E. Douville; J.-L. Joron; Jean-Louis Reyss; Daniel Rufer; N. Cantin; Yannick Lefrais; Christopher E. Miller; Guillaume Porraz; John Parkington; Jean-Philippe Rigaud; Pierre-Jean Texier


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

First molecular identification of a hafting adhesive in the Late Howiesons Poort at Diepkloof Rock Shelter (Western Cape, South Africa)

Armelle Charrié-Duhaut; Guillaume Porraz; Caroline R. Cartwright; Marina Igreja; Jacques Connan; Cedric Poggenpoel; Pierre-Jean Texier


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

The MSA sequence of Diepkloof and the history of southern African Late Pleistocene populations

Guillaume Porraz; John Parkington; Jean-Philippe Rigaud; Christopher E. Miller; Cedric Poggenpoel; Chantal Tribolo; Will Archer; Caroline R. Cartwright; Armelle Charrié-Duhaut; Laure Dayet; Marina Igreja; Norbert Mercier; Patrick Schmidt; Christine Verna; Pierre-Jean Texier


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Functional insights into the innovative Early Howiesons Poort technology at Diepkloof Rock Shelter (Western Cape, South Africa)

Marina Igreja; Guillaume Porraz


Journal of Human Evolution | 2015

A previously undescribed organic residue sheds light on heat treatment in the Middle Stone Age

Patrick Schmidt; Guillaume Porraz; Ludovic Bellot-Gurlet; Edmund C. February; Bertrand Ligouis; Céline Paris; Pierre-Jean Texier; John Parkington; Christopher E. Miller; Klaus G. Nickel; Nicholas J. Conard

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