Acta Anthropologica Sinica ›› 2024, Vol. 43 ›› Issue (05): 828-838.doi: 10.16359/j.1000-3193/AAS.2024.0009

• Excavation / Investigation Reports • Previous Articles     Next Articles

A preliminary report of the 2021 excavation at the Baobaoling site in Yunyang, Hubei

GAO Huangwen1(), LIU Yingjie2, LU Chengqiu1, SUN Xuefeng3, HUANG Xuchu4, XU Jingyue5,6   

  1. 1. Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Relice,Hubei Province, Wuhan 430077
    2. School of Ethnology and Sociology, Minzu University of China, Beijing 100081
    3. School of Geography and Ocean Science,Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023
    4. Shiyan Museum, Shiyan 442000
    5. Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100044
    6. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049
  • Received:2023-11-18 Revised:2024-01-29 Online:2024-10-15 Published:2024-10-10

Abstract:

Baobaoling site is a lower Paleolithic open-air site located on the third terrace of the left bank of the Han River in Zhengjiahe Village, Qingqu Town, Yunyang District, Shiyan City. From July to November 2021, the Hubei Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, together with the Shiyan Museum and Yunyang Museum, excavated the site with an area of 196 square meters and unearthed 341 pieces of lithic artifacts of different types. The types of lithic artifacts include cores, flakes, scrapers, choppers, points, handaxes, etc., with the most common being flake fragments, debris, chunks, and manuports, followed by flakes and cores, and the number of tools was small, mainly consisting of large and medium-sized cobble tools. The main raw materials of the lithic artifacts were vein quartz, followed by siliceous rock, and other rocks such as gabbro, sandstone, and andesite also accounted for a certain proportion. There are two retouched systems for the tools: one is the Chaîne Opératoire of small flake tools made from vein quartz, and the other is the Chaîne Opératoire of large cobble tools such as handaxes and choppers made from siliceous rock, gabbro, etc., and the two systems are independent of each other. Through the analysis of raw material exploitation and utilization strategies of the lithic artifacts from the site, it can be observed that ancient humans during this period had a clear understanding of different types of stones. They developed different utilization strategies based on the characteristics of different stone materials, enabling them to create both large and small tools using stones of different properties. Neither prepared behavior of the platforms and the flaked surfaces were observed on the cores and flakes. The selection of platforms generally had no special retouchings, with most being cortexs, while some were joint and plain platforms. Three debitage techniques, including hammering, bipolar knapping, and anvil technique, were observed, and there may also be the Yangtze flaking technique. Most of the cores had few flaking sequences, a small number of removals, simple flaking surfaces, and had not yet formed a fixed mode. The dating results showed that the site was at least 300,000 years old. There are few sites and locations in the Han River Basin’s third terrace that have been continuously dated by stratigraphic dating, and there is no more specific and in-depth research on the formation age of different strata. The discovery of Baobaoling Site provides important materials for exploring the cultural and technical capabilities and adaptive survival characteristics of ancient humans in the upstream area of the Han River during the Middle Pleistocene, and provides reliable references for the study of other sites in this region.

Key words: Han River Basin, Baobaoling Site, Lithic artifacts, Lower Paleolithic

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