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Dive into the research topics where Michael C. Pante is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael C. Pante.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

A new high-resolution 3-D quantitative method for identifying bone surface modifications with implications for the Early Stone Age archaeological record

Michael C. Pante; Matthew V. Muttart; Trevor L. Keevil; Robert J. Blumenschine; Jackson K. Njau; Stephen R. Merritt

Bone surface modifications have become important indicators of hominin behavior and ecology at prehistoric archaeological sites. However, the method by which we identify and interpret these marks remains largely unchanged despite decades of research, relying on qualitative criteria and lacking standardization between analysts. Recently, zooarchaeologists have begun using new technologies capable of capturing 3-D data from bone surface modifications to advance our knowledge of these informative traces. However, an important step in this research has been overlooked and after years of work, we lack both a universal and replicable protocol and an understanding of the precision of these techniques. Here we propose a new standard for identifying bone surface modifications using high-resolution 3-D data and offer a systematic and replicable approach for researchers to follow. Data were collected with a white-light non-contact confocal profilometer and analyzed with Digital Surfs Mountains® software. Our data show that when methods are standardized, results between researchers are statistically indistinguishable. Multivariate analyses using the measured parameters allow discrimination between stone tool cut marks and mammalian carnivore tooth marks with 97.5% accuracy. Application of this method to fossil specimens resulted in 100% correspondence with identifications made by an experienced analyst using macroscopic observations of qualitative features of bone surface modifications. High-resolution 3-D analyses of bone surface modifications have great potential to improve the reliability and accuracy of taphonomic research, but only if our methods are replicable and precise.


Interface Focus | 2016

Cut marks on bone surfaces: influences on variation in the form of traces of ancient behaviour

David R. Braun; Michael C. Pante; Will Archer

Although we know that our lineage has been producing sharp-edged tools for over 2.6 Myr, our knowledge of what they were doing with these tools is far less complete. Studies of these sharp-edged stone tools show that they were most probably used as cutting implements. However, the only substantial evidence of this is the presence of cut marks on the bones of animals found in association with stone tools in ancient deposits. Numerous studies have aimed to quantify the frequency and placement of these marks. At present there is little consensus on the meaning of these marks and how the frequency relates to specific behaviours in the past. Here we investigate the possibility that mechanical properties associated with edges of stone tools as well as the properties of bones themselves may contribute to the overall morphology of these marks and ultimately their placement in the archaeological record. Standardized tests of rock mechanics (Youngs modulus and Vickers hardness) indicate that the hardness of tool edges significantly affects cut-mark morphology. In addition, we show that indentation hardness of bones also impacts the overall morphology of cut marks. Our results show that rock type and bone portions influence the shape and prevalence of cut marks on animal bones.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2018

The paleoecology of Pleistocene birds from Middle Bed II, at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, and the environmental context of the Oldowan-Acheulean transition

Kari A. Prassack; Michael C. Pante; Jackson K. Njau; Ignacio de la Torre

Fossil bird data (community composition and taphonomic profiles) are used here to infer the environmental context of the Oldowan-Acheulean transitional period at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. This is the first comprehensive report on the Middle Bed II avifauna and includes fossils excavated by the Olduvai Geochronology and Archaeology Project (OGAP) and recently rediscovered fossils collected by Mary Leakey. Crane, ibis, darter, owl, raptor, crow, and vulture are reported from Bed II for the first time. The presence of these taxa, absent earlier in this Bed, point to a general opening and drying of the landscape with grassland and open woodland expansion. Taxa associated with dense, emergent wetland vegetation, such as dabbling ducks and rails, are uncommon and less diverse than earlier in Bed II. This suggests more mature wetlands with clearer waters. Cormorants continue to be common, but are less diverse. Cormorants and other roosting taxa provide evidence of trees in the area. Compared to lowermost Bed II, the Middle to Upper Bed II landscape is interpreted here as more open and drier (but not necessarily more arid), with matured wetlands, scattered trees, and a greater expansion of grasslands.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

A hidden treasure of the Lower Pleistocene at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania: The Leakey HWK EE assemblage

Michael C. Pante; Ignacio de la Torre

HWK EE is a little-known archaeological site from the top of Lower Bed II and the basal part of Middle Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. The site was originally excavated in the early 1970s by Mary Leakey, but the excavations and resulting lithic and fossil assemblages were never described. Here we report for the first time on the lithic and fossil assemblages that were recovered by Mary Leakey from the site. The lithic assemblage is one of the largest of any Oldowan site and is characterized by a core-and-flake technology with simple flaking techniques and minimal reduction of cores. Retouched flake frequencies and battered tools are higher than those reported for Olduvai Bed I and Lower Bed II assemblages, but flaking schemes are poorly organized. The fossil assemblage is well-preserved, taxonomically-rich, but dominated by bovids, and includes abundant feeding traces of both hominins and carnivores. Hominins are inferred to have broken the majority of limb bones at the site for access to marrow, while both carnivores and hominins likely had access to at least some flesh. HWK EE may represent one of the last Homo habilis sites at Olduvai Gorge, and is important to understanding the behavioral and cultural mechanisms that led to the emergence of the Acheulean and Homo erectus in the region.


Quaternary International | 2015

Revalidation of bone surface modification models for inferring fossil hominin and carnivore feeding interactions

Michael C. Pante; Robert S. Scott; Robert J. Blumenschine; Salvatore D. Capaldo


Quaternary Research | 2016

Geochemical “fingerprints” for Olduvai Gorge Bed II tuffs and implications for the Oldowan–Acheulean transition

Lindsay J. McHenry; Jackson K. Njau; Ignacio de la Torre; Michael C. Pante


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

New excavations at the HWK EE site: Archaeology, paleoenvironment and site formation processes during late Oldowan times at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Ignacio de la Torre; Rosa M. Albert; Adrián Arroyo; Richard I. Macphail; Lindsay J. McHenry; Rafael Mora; Jackson K. Njau; Michael C. Pante; Carlos Alberto Rivera-Rondón; Ágata Rodríguez-Cintas; Ian G. Stanistreet; Harald Stollhofen; Karol Wehr


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

The contexts and early Acheulean archaeology of the EF-HR paleo-landscape (Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania)

Ignacio de la Torre; Rosa M. Albert; Richard I. Macphail; Lindsay J. McHenry; Michael C. Pante; Ágata Rodríguez-Cintas; Ian G. Stanistreet; Harald Stollhofen


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

The carnivorous feeding behavior of early Homo at HWK EE, Bed II, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Michael C. Pante; Jackson K. Njau; Blaire Hensley-Marschand; Trevor L. Keevil; Carmen Martín-Ramos; Renata Peters; Ignacio de la Torre


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

Paleoecology of the Serengeti during the Oldowan-Acheulean transition at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania: The mammal and fish evidence

Faysal Bibi; Michael C. Pante; Antoine Souron; Kathlyn M. Stewart; Sara Varela; Lars Werdelin; Jean-Renaud Boisserie; Mikael Fortelius; Leslea J. Hlusko; Jackson K. Njau; Ignacio de la Torre

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Harald Stollhofen

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Lindsay J. McHenry

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Adrián Arroyo

University College London

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Faysal Bibi

Museum für Naturkunde

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Marion K. Bamford

University of the Witwatersrand

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