Khoikhoi and bushman pottery in the cape colony: Ethnohistory and later stone age ceramics of the South African interior

被引:22
|
作者
Bollong, CA
Sampson, CG
Smith, AB
机构
[1] SO METHODIST UNIV,DEPT ANTHROPOL,DALLAS,TX 75275
[2] S AFRICAN MUSEUM,DIV HUMAN SCI,ZA-8000 CAPE TOWN,SOUTH AFRICA
[3] UNIV CAPE TOWN,DEPT ARCHAEOL,ZA-7700 RONDEBOSCH,SOUTH AFRICA
关键词
D O I
10.1006/jaar.1997.0311
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Early travelers in the southwest and south of the Cape Colony, and later explorers in the north, saw Khoikhoi pastoralists making and using large, reddish or black, coil-built cooking vessels with shoulder lugs and incised necks with everted rims. In these, they boiled meat and used some as drums. Smaller serving bowls were also seen. Travelers on the east and north frontiers of the Colony saw Bushman hunter-gatherers using flat-bottomed cooking bowls tempered with grass and decorated with punctate motifs. They boiled meat, soups, bones, skins, locusts, and seed mush in these, converted some to drums, and used others in gift exchanges. Few later sherd collectors made full use of these ethnohistoric sightings, but developed their own labeling systems. Most thought that the Bushmen of the interior learned pot making through contact with coastal Khoikhoi. Why the two wares differed in every respect, however, could not be explained. Recent multidisciplinary studies in the northeast frontier area verify those differences, but also show that both wares were introduced together before 700 A.D., by herders. Thereafter the use of Khoi ware dwindled, then disappeared when the herding economy collapsed,leaving only grass-tempered bowls in general use. Thus ''Bushman'' pottery in the northeastern Cape appears to have its prehistoric roots in ancestral Khoi technology. (C) 1997 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:269 / 299
页数:31
相关论文
共 27 条
  • [21] Later Stone Age human hair from Vaalkrans Shelter, Cape Floristic Region of South Africa, reveals genetic affinity to Khoe groups
    Coutinho, Alexandra
    Malmstrom, Helena
    Edlund, Hanna
    Henshilwood, Christopher S.
    van Niekerk, Karen L.
    Lombard, Marlize
    Schlebusch, Carina M.
    Jakobsson, Mattias
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2021, 174 (04) : 701 - 713
  • [22] Middle and Later Stone Age large mammal and tortoise remains from Die Kelders Cave 1, Western Cape Province, South Africa
    Klein, RG
    Cruz-Uribe, K
    JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION, 2000, 38 (01) : 169 - 195
  • [23] Re-examining the South African Middle-to-Later Stone Age transition: Multivariate analysis of the Umhlatuzana and Rose Cottage Cave stone tool assemblages
    McCall, Grant S.
    Thomas, Jonathan T.
    AZANIA-ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN AFRICA, 2009, 44 (03) : 311 - 330
  • [24] NEW RADIOCARBON DATES AND BAYESIAN MODELS FOR NELSON BAY CAVE AND BYNESKRANSKOP 1: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN LATER STONE AGE SEQUENCE
    Loftus, Emma
    Sealy, Judith
    Lee-Thorp, Julia
    RADIOCARBON, 2016, 58 (02) : 365 - 381
  • [25] THE PINNACLE POINT SHELL MIDDEN COMPLEX: A MID TO LATE HOLOCENE RECORD OF LATER STONE AGE COASTAL FORAGING ALONG THE SOUTHERN CAPE COAST OF SOUTH AFRICA
    McGrath, James R.
    Cleghorn, Naomi
    Gennari, Betina
    Henderson, Struan
    Kyriacou, Katharine
    Nelson-Viljoen, Cindy
    Nilssen, Peter
    Richardson, Leesha
    Shelton, Christopher
    Wilkins, Jayne
    Marean, Curtis W.
    SOUTH AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2015, 70 (202): : 209 - 219
  • [26] CHEW MARKS AND CUT MARKS ON ANIMAL BONES FROM THE KASTEELBERG-B AND DUNE FIELD MIDDEN LATER STONE-AGE SITES, WESTERN CAPE PROVINCE, SOUTH-AFRICA
    CRUZURIBE, K
    KLEIN, RG
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1994, 21 (01) : 35 - 49
  • [27] Understanding Early Later Stone Age technology at a landscape-scale: evidence from the open-air locality Uitspankraal 7 (UPK7) in the Western Cape, South Africa
    Low, Marika
    Mackay, Alex
    Phillips, Natasha
    AZANIA-ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN AFRICA, 2017, 52 (03) : 373 - 406