• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Archaeological evidence for indigenous human occupation of Southern Arabia at the Pleistocene/ Holocene transition: The case of al-Hatab in Dhofar, Southern Oman
  • Contributor: Hilbert, Yamandú H.; Usik, Vitaly I.; Galletti, Christopher S.; Morley, Mike W.; Parton, Ash; Clark-Balzan, Laine; Schwenninger, Jean-Luc; Linnenlucke, Lauren P.; Roberts, Richard G.; Jacobs, Zenobia; Rose, Jeffrey I.
  • Published: PERSEE Program, 2015
  • Published in: Paléorient, 41 (2015) 2, Seite 31-49
  • Language: French
  • DOI: 10.3406/paleo.2015.5674
  • ISSN: 0153-9345
  • Keywords: General Medicine
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: The Neolithic peopling of Arabia is a subject of increasing debate, as different scenarios are proposed to describe the relatively sudden appearance of seemingly homogeneous archaeological sites throughout the south of the Peninsula during the Early Holocene. Such sites are identified by the co-occurrence of a laminar core reduction strategy with its supposed fossile directeur, the “ Fasad point.” This techno-typological package has been used by some to link these sites with an expansion of pastoralists from the Levant. A recent study of blade technologies in Southern Arabia, however, demonstrates a large degree of internal variability within these reduction strategies, whilst an inter-regional study of Fasad points reveals this artifact category to be both time-transgressive and morpho-metrically variable across parts of Southern Arabia. Archaeological findings from al-Hatab Rockshelter in Dhofar, Oman go further to challenge the notion of an expansion originating in the Levant and spreading across Southern Arabia. Here we demonstrate that an indigenous occupation with a blade technology and tanged points pre-dates the ‘ Levantine expansion’ by at least four millennia. Based on the lithic assemblage from al-Hatab, we argue the Arabian Late Palaeolithic developed locally in Southern Arabia, forming part of the previously defined Nejd Leptolithic tradition. The evidence from al-Hatab in conjunction with recent genetic findings indicates that some groups in Southern Arabia have persisted there since the Late Paleolithic ca 13,000 years ago, if not earlier.
  • Access State: Open Access