Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Animal remains from Likoaeng, an open-air river site, and its place in the post-classic Wilton of Lesotho and eastern Free State, South Africa

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Ina Plug, Professor Geoffrey Bailey

Downloads

Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.


Abstract

In several regions of southern Africa, Late Holocene post-classic Wilton assemblages (from c. 4000 BP) are associated with evidence of social and economic intensification. In this paper, we draw attention to Likoaeng, a newly excavated site in the Lesotho highlands, where fishing appears to have been the dominant subsistence activity. While analysis of the fish fauna recovered there continues, we concentrate here on reporting in detail the mammal, bird, reptile and mollusc assemblages from the first season's excavation at the site. Likoaeng is unique in that it has good bone preservation, not previously encountered at inland open-air, Later Stone Age sites. It is the largest faunal sample (fish excluded) to date recovered in Lesotho associated with the post-classic Wilton. To establish the place of Likoaeng within the post-classic Wilton, the remains are compared with those found in shelter sites in Lesotho and the eastern Free State that share comparable environmental conditions. Possible differences or similarities in respect of species composition, skeletal remains and bone preservation are discussed. Some of the taxa represented are not known historically from Lesotho. Remains also reflect both the open-air nature of the site as well as the riverine environment. Likoaeng provides a glimpse of life on a specialized camp site. It shows a major shift in the subsistence strategies represented by the upper and lower layers, from predominantly hunting in the latter to mainly fishing in the later period. The site provides evidence of specialization within the post-classic Wilton period. Compared with others in the region dating to the same period, Likoaeng was an important site, intensively occupied for very short periods at a time. The possibility that these occupation pulses were associated with aggregation activities is examined.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Plug I, Mitchell P, Bailey G

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: South African Journal of Science

Year: 2003

Volume: 99

Issue: 3-4

Pages: 143-152

Print publication date: 01/03/2003

ISSN (print): 0038-2353

ISSN (electronic): 1996-7489

Publisher: AOSIS Pty. Ltd.


Share