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Featured researches published by Thomas W. Plummer.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2014

Old stones' song: use-wear experiments and analysis of the Oldowan quartz and quartzite assemblage from Kanjera South (Kenya).

Cristina Lemorini; Thomas W. Plummer; David R. Braun; Alyssa N. Crittenden; Peter Ditchfield; Laura C. Bishop; Fritz Hertel; James S. Oliver; Frank W. Marlowe; Margaret J. Schoeninger; Richard Potts

Evidence of Oldowan tools by ∼2.6 million years ago (Ma) may signal a major adaptive shift in hominin evolution. While tool-dependent butchery of large mammals was important by at least 2.0xa0Ma, the use of artifacts for tasks other than faunal processing has been difficult to diagnose. Here we report on use-wear analysis of ∼2.0xa0Ma quartz and quartzite artifacts from Kanjera South, Kenya. A use-wear framework that links processing of specific materials and tool motions to their resultant use-wear patterns was developed. A blind test was then carried out to assess and improve the efficacy of this experimental use-wear framework, which was then applied to the analysis of 62 Oldowan artifacts from Kanjera South. Use-wear on a total of 23 artifact edges was attributed to the processing of specific materials. Use-wear on seven edges (30%) was attributed to animal tissue processing, corroborating zooarchaeological evidence for butchery at the site. Use-wear on 16 edges (70%) was attributed to the processing of plant tissues, including wood, grit-covered plant tissues that we interpret as underground storage organs (USOs), and stems of grass or sedges. These results expand our knowledge of the suite of behaviours carried out in the vicinity of Kanjera South to include the processing of materials that would be invisible using standard archaeological methods. Wood cutting and scraping may represent the production and/or maintenance of wooden tools. Use-wear related to USO processing extends the archaeological evidence for hominin acquisition and consumption of this resource by over 1.5xa0Ma. Cutting of grasses, sedges or reeds may be related to a subsistence task (e.g., grass seed harvesting, cutting out papyrus culm for consumption) and/or a non-subsistence related task (e.g., production of twine, simple carrying devices, or bedding). These results highlight the adaptive significance of lithic technology for hominins at Kanjera.


International Journal of Primatology | 2012

A Papionin Multilevel Society as a Model for Hominin Social Evolution

Larissa Swedell; Thomas W. Plummer

Multilevel societies are unique in their ability to facilitate the maintenance of strong and consistent social bonds among some individuals while allowing separation among others, which may be especially important when social and sexual bonds carry significant and reliable benefits to individuals within social groups. Here we examine the importance of social and sexual bonds in the multilevel society of hamadryas baboons (Papio hamadryas) and apply these principles to social evolution in Plio-Pleistocene hominins. The behavior, adaptations, and socioecology of baboons (Papio spp.) have long been recognized as providing an important comparative sample to elucidate the processes of human evolution, and the social system of hamadryas baboons in particular shares even more similarities with humans than that of other baboons. Here we draw parallels between processes during the evolution of hamadryas social organization and those characterizing late Pliocene or early Pleistocene hominins, most likely Homo erectus. The higher costs of reproduction faced by female Homo erectus, exacerbated by an increased reliance on difficult to acquire, nutrient-dense foods, are commonly thought to have been alleviated by a strengthening of male–female bonds (via male provisioning and the evolution of monogamy) or by the assistance of older, postreproductive females (via grandmothering). We suggest that both of these social arrangements could have been present in Plio-Pleistocene hominins if we assume the development of a multilevel society such as that in hamadryas baboons. The evolution of a multilevel society thus underlies the adaptive potential for the complexity that we see in modern human social organization.


Journal of anthropological sciences = Rivista di antropologia : JASS / Istituto italiano di antropologia | 2016

Oldowan Hominin Behavior and Ecology at Kanjera South, Kenya

Thomas W. Plummer; Laura C. Bishop

The Early Stone Age archaeological record does not become persistent and widespread until approximately 2.0-1.7 million years ago, when Oldowan sites spread across Africa and ultimately into Eurasia. However, good records of hominin behavior from this important time interval are uncommon. Here we describe recent findings from the two million year old Oldowan site of Kanjera South, on the Homa Peninsula of southwestern Kenya. Kanjera South is the oldest Oldowan site with large assemblages of stone artifacts and well-preserved archaeological fauna. Our research indicates that hominin activities were situated in an open habitat within a grassland dominated ecosystem, the first documentation of an archaeological site in such an open setting. Hominins selectively collected and transported stone materials (30% of the lithic assemblage) over longer distances (at least 10 km) than is typical for the Oldowan, reflecting their preference for hard, easily-flaked lithologies unavailable on the northern half of the Homa Peninsula. They deployed different technological strategies to more intensively utilize these hard, non-local raw materials. Artifacts were used for a variety of tasks, including butchering small antelopes probably obtained by hunting, working wood, working soft plant material, and processing underground storage organs. These data suggest that the Kanjera hominins utilized a technological system that allowed them to extract nutrient dense animal and plant foods from their environment. This shift towards the acquisition of nutritious, hard-to-acquire foods in packets large enough to be shared may have facilitated brain and body size expansion in the genus Homo.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2018

Ecomorphological analysis of bovid mandibles from Laetoli Tanzania using 3D geometric morphometrics: Implications for hominin paleoenvironmental reconstruction

Frances Forrest; Thomas W. Plummer; Ryan L. Raaum

The current study describes a new method of mandibular ecological morphology (ecomorphology). Three-dimensional geometric morphometrics (3D GM) was used to quantify mandibular shape variation between extant bovids with different feeding preferences. Landmark data were subjected to generalized Procrustes analysis (GPA), principal components analysis (PCA), and discriminant function analysis (DFA). The PCA resulted in a continuum from grazers to browsers along PC1 and DFA classified 88% or more of the modern specimens to the correct feeding category. The protocol was reduced to a subset of landmarks on the mandibular corpus in order to make it applicable to incomplete fossils. The reduced landmark set resulted in greater overlap between feeding categories but maintained the same continuum as the complete landmark model. The DFA resubstitution and jackknife analyses resulted in classification success rates of 85% and 80%, respectively. The reduced landmark model was applied to fossil mandibles from the Upper Laetolil Beds (∼4.3-3.5xa0Ma) and Upper Ndolanya Beds (∼2.7-2.6xa0Ma) at Laetoli, Tanzania in order to assess antelope diet, and indirectly evaluate paleo-vegetation structure. The majority of the fossils were classified by the DFA as browsers or mixed feeders preferring browse. Our results indicate a continuous presence of wooded habitats and are congruent with recent environmental studies at Laetoli indicating a mosaic woodland-bushland-grassland savanna ecosystem.


Journal of Human Evolution | 1994

Hominid paleoecology at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania as indicated by antelope remains

Thomas W. Plummer; Laura C. Bishop


Journal of Human Evolution | 1999

Research on late Pliocene Oldowan sites at Kanjera South, Kenya

Thomas W. Plummer; Laura C. Bishop; Peter Ditchfield; Jason F. Hicks


Journal of Human Evolution | 1999

Current research on the Late Pliocene and Pleistocene deposits north of Homa Mountain, southwestern Kenya

Peter Ditchfield; Jason F. Hicks; Thomas W. Plummer; Laura C. Bishop; Richard Potts


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1995

Hominid fossil sample from Kanjera, Kenya: Description, provenance, and implications of new and earlier discoveries

Thomas W. Plummer; Richard Potts


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2018

Core Use-Life Distributions in Lithic Assemblages as a Means for Reconstructing Behavioral Patterns

Matthew Douglass; Sam C. Lin; David R. Braun; Thomas W. Plummer


Geological Magazine | 2018

Geochronology and physical context of Oldowan site formation at Kanjera South, Kenya

Peter Ditchfield; E. Whitfield; T. Vincent; Thomas W. Plummer; David R. Braun; A. Deino; Fritz Hertel; James S. Oliver; Julien Louys; Laura C. Bishop

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Laura C. Bishop

Liverpool John Moores University

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Fritz Hertel

California State University

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Jason F. Hicks

Denver Museum of Nature and Science

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Richard Potts

National Museum of Natural History

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Julien Louys

Australian National University

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