Abstract
Goda Buticha is located some 30 km west of the Dire Dawa city in eastern Ethiopia and is one of the rare stratified archaeological sites in the Horn of Africa that documents Late Pleistocene human occupation from at least c. 63 ka. To date, c. 5 m3 of sediments have been excavated from a surface of 2 m2 at the entrance of the cave. The Goda Buticha sequence is marked by an important chronological gap in the human occupation during the MIS 2 and beginning of Holocene, similarly to other records in the region. Besides abundant lithic artifacts, major archaeological finds at the site include several hundreds of mammalian and small vertebrate remains, hominin remains, and expressions of symbolic behavior in the form of ostrich eggshell beads and engraved fragments. These cultural assemblages of Goda Buticha questions the dynamics of behavioral change and continuity in the frame of the Middle Stone Age/Later Stone Age transition. The deposit of the cave also documents evidence of climate and local environment shifts throughout the sequence.
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CITATION STYLE
Pleurdeau, D., Asrat, A., Hovers, E., Pearson, O., Leplongeon, A., Crèvecoeur, I., … Assefa, Z. (2023). Goda Buticha, Ethiopia. In Handbook of Pleistocene Archaeology of Africa: Hominin behavior, geography, and chronology (pp. 337–352). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-20290-2_20
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