posted on 2025-03-19, 01:33authored byYue Hu, Qijun Ruan, Jianhui Liu, Ben Marwick, Bo LiBo Li
Tianhuadong is a cave site located in the northwest of Yunnan Province, China. Since 2010, several surveys and one test excavation have yielded more than 1000 stone artifacts. The lithic assemblage shows some features of Levallois and Quina technologies, similar to those found in Middle Paleolithic sites in the Western Hemisphere. In this study, we summarize the lithic industry and propose a reliable chronology for the site using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of individual quartz grains extracted from sediments. We applied the standardized growth curve method to deal with the problem associated with the saturation in natural OSL signals in quartz. Our dating results yielded ages of 90-40 ka, suggesting that the associated lithic assemblage could be assigned to Marine Oxygen Isotope Stages 5 and 4 and could potentially represent Middle Paleolithic technologies. Because the number of Middle Paleolithic sites in southwest China is small, this site provides one of the few traces of human occupation in southwest China during the early upper Pleistocene. Thus, it is important for understanding hominin evolution and dispersal in this region.
Funding
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council through Future Fellowships to BL (FT140100384) and postgraduate scholarships from the University of Wollongong to YH. We thank Sam Lin for his constructive advice; Zenobia Jacobs, Yasaman Jafari, and Terry Lachlan for help in the laboratory; and Ashok Singhvi and an anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments.
Australian Research Council | FT140100384
University of Wollongong
Next-generation luminescence dating techniques for earth and archaeological science applications : Australian Research Council (ARC) | FT140100384