Abstract
Amanuel Beyin and John J. Shea
Reconnaissance of Prehistoric Sites on the Red Sea Coast of Eritrea, NE Africa
Journal of Field Archaeology 32 (2007) 1--16
A surface reconnaissance was conducted for prehistoric sites along the
Gulf of Zula and the Buri Peninsula, on the Red Sea coast of Eritrea.
The sites, found in a wide range of geomorphological settings, belong
mainly to Middle Stone Age, Late Stone Age and Neolithic cultural
phases. A few Acheulian bifaces were also documented from eroding
surfaces. The different contexts suggest intermittent occupation of the
area during Late Pleistocene and Holocene times. Middle Stone Age and
Late Stone Age sites in close proximity to the present coastline
support a model of coastal adaptation by early humans during the Late
Pleistocene. Such coastally-adapted humans are thought to have been
source populations for human dispersal into Eurasia across the Bab
al-Mandab Strait (southern Red Sea).
Volume 32 Number 1 (Spring 2007)
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