Mike W. Morley
Oxford Brookes University
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Featured researches published by Mike W. Morley.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Jeffrey I. Rose; Vitaly I. Usik; Anthony E. Marks; Yamandu Hilbert; Christopher S. Galletti; Ash Parton; Jean Marie Geiling; Viktor Černý; Mike W. Morley; Richard G. Roberts
Despite the numerous studies proposing early human population expansions from Africa into Arabia during the Late Pleistocene, no archaeological sites have yet been discovered in Arabia that resemble a specific African industry, which would indicate demographic exchange across the Red Sea. Here we report the discovery of a buried site and more than 100 new surface scatters in the Dhofar region of Oman belonging to a regionally-specific African lithic industry - the late Nubian Complex - known previously only from the northeast and Horn of Africa during Marine Isotope Stage 5, ∼128,000 to 74,000 years ago. Two optically stimulated luminescence age estimates from the open-air site of Aybut Al Auwal in Oman place the Arabian Nubian Complex at ∼106,000 years ago, providing archaeological evidence for the presence of a distinct northeast African Middle Stone Age technocomplex in southern Arabia sometime in the first half of Marine Isotope Stage 5.
Nature | 2016
Thomas Sutikna; Matthew W. Tocheri; Michael J Morwood; E. Wahyu Saptomo; Jatmiko; Rokus Due Awe; Sri Wasisto; Kira Westaway; Maxime Aubert; Bo Li; Jian-xin Zhao; Michael Storey; Brent V. Alloway; Mike W. Morley; Hanneke J. M. Meijer; Gerrit D van den Bergh; Rainer Grün; Anthony Dosseto; Adam Brumm; William L. Jungers; Richard G. Roberts
Homo floresiensis, a primitive hominin species discovered in Late Pleistocene sediments at Liang Bua (Flores, Indonesia), has generated wide interest and scientific debate. A major reason this taxon is controversial is because the H. floresiensis-bearing deposits, which include associated stone artefacts and remains of other extinct endemic fauna, were dated to between about 95 and 12 thousand calendar years (kyr) ago. These ages suggested that H. floresiensis survived until long after modern humans reached Australia by ~50 kyr ago. Here we report new stratigraphic and chronological evidence from Liang Bua that does not support the ages inferred previously for the H. floresiensis holotype (LB1), ~18 thousand calibrated radiocarbon years before present (kyr cal. bp), or the time of last appearance of this species (about 17 or 13–11 kyr cal. bp). Instead, the skeletal remains of H. floresiensis and the deposits containing them are dated to between about 100 and 60 kyr ago, whereas stone artefacts attributable to this species range from about 190 to 50 kyr in age. Whether H. floresiensis survived after 50 kyr ago—potentially encountering modern humans on Flores or other hominins dispersing through southeast Asia, such as Denisovans—is an open question.
PLOS ONE | 2013
W.J. Rink; Norbert Mercier; Dušan Mihailović; Mike W. Morley; Jeroen W. Thompson; Mirjana Roksandic
Newly obtained ages, based on electron spin resonance combined with uranium series isotopic analysis, and infrared/post-infrared luminescence dating, provide a minimum age that lies between 397 and 525 ka for the hominin mandible BH-1 from Mala Balanica cave, Serbia. This confirms it as the easternmost hominin specimen in Europe dated to the Middle Pleistocene. Inferences drawn from the morphology of the mandible BH-1 place it outside currently observed variation of European Homo heidelbergensis. The lack of derived Neandertal traits in BH-1 and its contemporary specimens in Southeast Europe, such as Kocabaş, Vasogliano and Ceprano, coupled with Middle Pleistocene synapomorphies, suggests different evolutionary forces acting in the east of the continent where isolation did not play such an important role during glaciations.
Archive | 2016
Brian Stewart; Adrian G. Parker; Genevieve Dewar; Mike W. Morley; Lucy F. Allott
The Maloti-Drakensberg Mountains are southern Africa’s highest and give rise to South Africa’s largest river, the Orange-Senqu. At Melikane Rockshelter in highland Lesotho (~1800 m a.s.l.), project AMEMSA (Adaptations to Marginal Environments in the Middle Stone Age) has documented a pulsed human presence since at least MIS 5. Melikane can be interrogated to understand when and why early modern humans chose to increase their altitudinal range. This paper presents the results of a multi-proxy paleoenvironmental analysis of this sequence. Vegetation shifts are registered against a background signal of C3-dominated grasslands, suggesting fluctuations in temperature, humidity and atmospheric CO2 within a generally cool highland environment with high moisture availability. Discussing Melikane in relation to other paleoenvironmental and archeological archives in the region, a model is developed linking highland population flux to prevailing climate. It is proposed that short-lived but acute episodes of rapid onset aridity saw interior groups disperse into the highlands to be nearer to the Orange-Senqu headwaters, perhaps via the river corridor itself.
Antiquity | 2016
Piotr Osypiński; Mike W. Morley; Marta Osypińska; Anna M. Kotarba-Morley
Abstract The Epipalaeolithic of the Levant witnessed important changes in subsistence behaviour, foreshadowing the transition to sedentism and cultivation, but much less is known of contemporary developments in the Middle Nile Valley. Here, Affad 23, a 16000-year-old settlement, on the margins of a resource-rich, multi-channel floodplain, offers exceptional insights. Unusually good preservation has left the remains of pits and postholes, indicating the construction of temporary shelters and specialised functional zones. The Affad 23 community successfully exploited a wide range of riverine resources, and created a highly organised seasonal camp adjacent to convenient, resource-rich hunting grounds. Surprisingly, they continued to exploit Levallois-like tools, rather than adopting the new technologies (e.g. microliths) that were then evolving in Upper Egypt.
Quaternary International | 2012
Brian Stewart; Genevieve Dewar; Mike W. Morley; Robyn Helen Inglis; Mark Wheeler; Zenobia Jacobs; Richard G. Roberts
Quaternary Research | 2011
Mike W. Morley; J.C. Woodward
Journal of Human Evolution | 2011
Mirjana Roksandic; Dušan Mihailović; Norbert Mercier; Vesna Dimitrijević; Mike W. Morley; Zoran Rakocevic; Bojana Mihailović; Pierre Guibert; Jeff Babb
Quaternary International | 2011
Ryan Rabett; Joanna Appleby; Alison J. Blyth; Lucy Farr; Athanasia Gallou; Thomas Griffiths; Jason Hawkes; David Marcus; Lisa Marlow; Mike W. Morley; Nguyen Cao Tan; Nguyen Van Son; Kirsty Penkman; Tim Reynolds; Christopher Stimpson; Katherine Szabo
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2017
Mike W. Morley; Paul Goldberg; Thomas Sutikna; Matthew W. Tocheri; Linda C. Prinsloo; Jatmiko; E. Wahyu Saptomo; Sri Wasisto; Richard G. Roberts