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Evidence from the Dayao Paleolithic site, Inner Mongolia for human migration into arid northwest China during mid-Pleistocene interglacials

Authors :
Xingwu Feng
Haibin Wu
Mingchao Shan
Fuyou Chen
Xing Gao
Qin Li
Yinghua Wang
Junyi Ge
John W. Olsen
Ruiping Tang
Xinying Zhou
Yan Li
Chenglong Deng
Source :
Quaternary Research. 103:113-129
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

The Dayao Paleolithic site, located in Inner Mongolia on the eastern margin of China's vast northwestern drylands, was a lithic quarry-workshop utilized by Pleistocene human migrants through the region. Determining the age of this activity has previously yielded controversial results. Our magnetostratigraphic and OSL dating results suggest the two artifact-bearing paleosols are correlated with MIS 5 and 7, respectively. Correlating paleoclimatic data with marine δ18O records leads us to conclude that two sandy gravel layers containing many artifacts in the lower part of the Dayao sequence were formed during MIS 9 and 11, if not earlier. Our results reveal that the earliest human occupation at the Dayao site occurred before ca. 400 ka during a relatively warm and moist interglacial period, similar to several subsequent occupations, documenting the earliest and northernmost archaeological assemblage yet reported in China's arid northwest. We conclude that the northward and southward displacements of the East Asian summer monsoon rain belt during past interglacial-glacial cycles were responsible for the discontinuous human occupation detected at the Dayao site. The penetration of this precipitation regime into dryland ecologies via the Huanghe (Yellow River) Valley effectively created a corridor for hominin migration into China's arid northwest.

Details

ISSN :
10960287 and 00335894
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Quaternary Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6a03052d74dc53a402f5f05ba5812286
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2020.115