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West African Middle Stone Age Timeline using ESR dating of quartz

Project description

Remembering West Africa’s forgotten evolutionary role

For decades, West Africa has remained an enigmatic piece of the puzzle in understanding human evolution. Despite recent discoveries of Middle Stone Age (MSA) sites challenging this perception, a lack of reliable chronometric dates has hindered progress. In this context, the MCSA-funded WATIME project aims to resolve the chronology of MSA sites in West Africa, using the electron spin resonance (ESR) method as a key alternative to date quartz. Building on promising results from a pilot study in the Ivory Coast, WATIME focuses on enhancing precision of measurement, improving signal characterisation, and developing accurate criteria for assessing the suitability of ESR signals. Through these efforts, WATIME opens a new chapter in dating West Africa's cultural and behavioural changes, bringing the region's evolutionary significance to the forefront.

Objective

The evolution of H. sapiens in Africa is intrinsically linked to the expansion of the Middle Stone Age (MSA). West Africa is one of the last frontiers for human evolutionary research and has long been considered to have played virtually no role in our species' biological, cognitive and behavioural evolution. Recently-excavated MSA sites across West African changed this perception, but there is still a critical need for reliable chronometric dates to establish a secure timeline for the MSA. While the Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating applied to quartz has already provided some key chronological constraints, the method has also shown some clear limitations as it cannot chronologically cover the entire MSA time range.

WATIME project aims to explore the potential of the Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dating, the key alternative method to date quartz. The project is built on promising results from a pilot study at Bete I-Anyama site (Ivory Coast), which not only demonstrated the potential and feasibility of using Titanium (Ti) signals to date quartz samples from West Africa, but also led to the identification of some specific methodological issues worth investigating further to ensure the reliability of the ESR dating method. WATIME will address them by developing and quantifying and measurable accurate criteria to assess the suitability of Ti ESR signal, improving spectral resolution, measurement precision and signal characterization.

Implementing a new rapid and accurate laboratory ESR dating procedure will help resolve the chronology of MSA West African sites that cannot be dated by other means. WATIME opens an innovative way to date the key changes in cultural/behavioural patterns from the archaeological record in West Africa. The results will be broadly communicated through open access and open peer reviewed article resources, and targeted public outreach activities.

Coordinator

CENTRO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACION SOBRE LA EVOLUCION HUMANA
Net EU contribution
€ 165 312,96
Address
PASEO SIERRA DE ATAPUERCA 3
09002 Burgos
Spain

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Region
Centro (ES) Castilla y León Burgos
Activity type
Research Organisations
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Total cost
No data