Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-22T00:42:00.715Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Paleoenvironment and human activity on the central Korean Peninsula during the late MIS 3 and MIS 2

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2022

Chol U
Affiliation:
Institute of Human Evolution and Development History, Faculty of History, Kim Il Sung University, Taesong District, Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Rye Sun Choe*
Affiliation:
Institute of Human Evolution and Development History, Faculty of History, Kim Il Sung University, Taesong District, Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Jae Nam Ri
Affiliation:
Institute of Human Evolution and Development History, Faculty of History, Kim Il Sung University, Taesong District, Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Myong Gol Han
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology, Social Academy, Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea
*
*Corresponding author email address: rs.choi0327@ryongnamsan.edu.kp

Abstract

Layers 12 and 13 of the Chongphadae Cave site located northwest of the central part of the Korean Peninsula include human fossils, fireplaces, a great number of lithic artefacts, and mammal remains. These layers represent new evidence for the paleoenvironment, human occupation, and activities in this region during the late MIS 3 and MIS 2, associated with global cold and dry climate, respectively. Most of lithic artefacts collected are flake tools. Raw material selection, lithic reduction technology, and lithic industry represent peculiar local characteristics. Our analysis of faunal assemblages also suggests that the Chongphadae region had a rich ecosystem capable of forming a diverse mammalian fauna including ungulates (mainly deer and horses) during this period. It is likely that the mosaic landscapes, including grasslands, forests, rivers, and wetlands, provided a favorable environment for humans, as well as mammals and plants, and the occupants of the site actively hunted and gathered in a relatively temperate environment. Our study suggests that the central Korean Peninsula was not severely affected by global dry and cold events such as LGM, although it was a somewhat humid and cold environment during the late MIS 3 and MIS 2. The central Korean Peninsula may have existed as an unknown refugium (or area of endemism) in northeastern Asia during this time.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Barton, L., Brantingham, P.J., Ji, D.X., 2007. Late Pleistocene climate change and Paleolithic cultural evolution in northern China: implications from the last glacial maximum. In: Madsen, D.B., Chen, F.H., Gao, X. (Eds.), Late Quaternary Climate Change and Human Adaptation in Arid China (Developments in Quaternary Science 9). Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 105128.Google Scholar
Baskin, L., Danell, K., 2003. Ecology of Ungulates: a Handbook of Species in Eastern Europe and Northern and Central Asia. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beijing Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Science, Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology, 2007. Longwangchan Paleolithic site in Yichuan County, Shaanxi Province. Archaeology 7, 38. [in Chinese]Google Scholar
Belmaker, M., Bar-Yosef, O., Belfer-Cohen, A., Meshveliani, T., Jakeli, N., 2016. The environment in the Caucasus in the Upper Paleolithic (Late Pleistocene): evidence from the small mammals from Dzudzuana Cave, Georgia. Quaternary International 425, 415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berto, C., Boscato, P., Boschin, F., Luzi, E., Ronchitelli, A., 2017. Paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic context during the Upper Palaeolithic (late Upper Pleistocene) in the Italian Peninsula. The small mammal record from Grotta Paglicci (Rignano Garganico, Foggia, Southern Italy). Quaternary Science Reviews 168, 3041.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berto, C., Luzi, E., Canini, G.M., Guerreschi, A., Fontana, F., 2018. Climate and landscape in Italy during late Epigravettian. The late glacial small mammal sequence of Riparo Tagliente (Stallavena di Grezzana, Verona, Italy). Quaternary Science Reviews 184, 132142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, S.E.P., Miracle, P.T., Stevens, R.E., O'Connell, T.C., 2016. Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene migratory behavior of ungulates using isotopic analysis of tooth enamel and its effects on forager mobility. PLoS ONE 11, e0155714. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155714.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breeze, P.S., Groucutt, H.S., Drake, N.A., White, T.S., Jennings, R.P., Petraglia, M.D., 2016. Palaeohydrological corridors for hominin dispersals in the Middle East ~250–70,000 years ago. Quaternary Science Reviews 144, 155185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Britton, K., Grimes, V., Niven, L., Steele, T.E., McPherron, S., Soressi, M., Kelly, T.E., Jaubert, J., Hublin, J.-J., Richards, M.P., 2011. Strontium isotope evidence for migration in Late Pleistocene Rangifer: implications for Neanderthal hunting strategies at the Middle Paleolithic site of Jonzac, France. Journal of Human Evolution 61, 176185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broughton, J.M., Cannon, M.D., Bayham, F.E., Byers, D.A., 2011. Prey body size and ranking in zooarchaeology: theory, empirical evidence, and applications from the northern Great Basin. American Antiquity 76, 403428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, J.H., 1973. Species diversity of seed-eating desert rodents in sand dune habitats. Ecology 54, 775787.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carto, S.L., Weaver, A.J., Hetherington, R., Lam, Y., Wiebe, E.C., 2009. Out of Africa and into an ice age: on the role of global climate change in the Late Pleistocene migration of early modern humans out of Africa. Journal of Human Evolution 56, 139151.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Choe, R.S., Han, K.S., Kim, S.C., U, C., Ho, C.U., Kang, I., 2020. Late Pleistocene fauna from Chongphadae Cave, Hwangju County, Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Quaternary Research 97, 4254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Choe, R.S., Han, K.S., Ri, M.H., Ri, J.N., 2021. Preliminary investigation of Late Pleistocene fauna from Ryonggok Cave No. 1, Sangwon County, North Hwanghae Province, Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Journal of Quaternary Science 36, 11371142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, P.U., Dyke, A.S., Shakun, J.D., Carlson, A.E., Clark, J., Wohlfarth, B., Mitrovica, J.X., Hostetler, S.W., McCabe, A.M., 2009. The last glacial maximum. Science 325, 710714.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cramer, M.J., Willig, M.R., 2002. Habitat heterogeneity, habitat associations, and rodent species diversity in a sand-shinnery-oak landscape. Journal of Mammalogy 83, 743753.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derevianko, A.P., Rybin, E.P., Gladyshev, S.A., Gunchinsuren, B., Tsybankov, A.A., Olsen, J.W., 2013. Developments of technological traditions of lithic tool manufacture in the lithic industries of the early Upper Paleolithic in northern Mongolia (based on materials from the sites of Tolbor-4 and -15). Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia 56, 2137.Google Scholar
Du, S., Liu, F., 2014. Loessic Paleolithic discovery at the Beiyao site, Luoyang, and its implications for understanding the origin of modern humans in northern China. Quaternary International 349, 308315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fox, B.J., 1989. Community ecology of macropodoids. In: Grigg, G., Jarman, P., Hume, I. (Eds.), Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-Kangaroos. Surrey Beatty and Sons, Baulkham Hills, NSW, Australia, pp. 89140.Google Scholar
Gamble, C., 1986. The Paleolithic Settlement of Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Gladyshev, S., Olsen, J., Tabarev, A.V., Kuzmin, Y.V., 2010. Chronology and periodization of Upper Paleolithic sites in Mongolia. Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia 38, 3340.Google Scholar
Graves, H.B., 1984. Behavior and ecology of wild and feral swine (Sus scrofa). Journal of Animal Science 58, 482492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grayson, D.K., 1984. Quantitative Zooarchaeology. Academic Press, Orlando.Google Scholar
Grayson, D.K., 1998. Moisture history and small mammal community richness during the latest Pleistocene and Holocene, northern Bonneville Basin, Utah. Quaternary Research 49, 330334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gupta, S. K., Polach, H.A., 1985. Radiocarbon dating practices at ANU. Radiocarbon Laboratory, Research School of Pacific Studies, ANU, Canberra, 173 pp.Google Scholar
Ivanova, S., Gurova, M., Spassov, N., Hristova, L., Tzankov, N., Popov, V., Marinova, E., et al. , 2015. Magura Cave, Bulgaria: a multidisciplinary study of Late Pleistocene human palaeoenvironment in the Balkans. Quaternary International 415, 86108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jaubert, J., Bertran, P., Fontugne, M., Jarry, M., Lacombe, S., Leroyer, C., Marmet, E., et al. , 2004. Le Paleolithique superieur ancien de Mongolie: Dorolj 1(Egiïn Gol). Analogies avec les donnees de l'Altaï et de Siberie. In: Congres, Le Secretariat du (Ed.), The Upper Palaeolithic General Sessions and Posters. Acts of the XIVth UISPP Congress, University of Liege, Belgium, 2–8 September 2001. Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 245251.Google Scholar
Jones, E.L., 2004. Dietary evenness, prey choice, and human-environment interactions. Journal of Archaeological Science 31, 307317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ju, L., Wang, H., Jiang, D., 2007. Simulation of the last glacial maximum climate over East Asia with a regional climate model nested in a general circulation model. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 248, 376390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, C.Z, Li, Y.C., Li, G., Wang, C.Y., Li, B., 2019. Environmental change and human activity in the northeastern part of the North China Plain during early MIS-2. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 170, 96105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, F., Wang, J., Zhou, X., Wang, X., Long, H., Chen, Y., Olsen, J.W., Chen, F., 2018. Early Marine Isotope Stage 3 human occupation of the Shandong Peninsula, coastal North China. Journal of Quaternary Science 33, 934944.Google Scholar
Lisiecki, L., Raymo, M., 2005. A Plio-Pleistocene stack of 57 globally distributed benthic-18O records. Paleoceanography 20, 522533.Google Scholar
Li, Z.-Y., Ma, H.-H., 2016. Techno-typological analysis of the microlithic assemblage at the Xuchang Man site, Lingjing, central China. Quaternary International 400, 120129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longin, R., 1971. New method of collagen extraction for radiocarbon dating. Nature 230, 241242.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Niu, D.W., Pei, S.W., Zhang, S.Q., Zhou, Z.Y., Wang, H.M., Gao, X., 2016. The initial Upper Palaeolithic in Northwest China: new evidence of cultural variability and change from Shuidonggou locality 7. Quaternary International 400, 111119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton, C.J., 2000. The current state of Korean paleoanthropology. Journal of Human Evolution 38, 803825.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Orlando, L., Mashkour, M., Burke, A., Douady, C.J., Eisenmann, V., Hänni, C., 2006. Geographic distribution of an extinct equid (Equus hydruntinus: Mammalia, Equidae) revealed by morphological and genetical analyses of fossils. Molecular Ecology 15, 20832093.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pellegrini, M., Donahue, R.E., Chenery, C., Evans, J., Lee-Thorp, J., Montgomery, J., Mussi, M., 2008. Faunal migration in late-glacial central Italy: implications for human resource exploitation. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry 22, 17141726.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Popova, L.V., 2015. Small mammal fauna as an evidence of environmental dynamics in the Holocene of Ukrainian area. Quaternary International 357, 8292.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Qiu, Z.X., 2006. Quaternary environmental changes and evolution of large mammals in North China. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 44, 109132.Google Scholar
Rasmussen, S.O., Bigler, M., Blockley, S.P., Blunier, T., Buchardt, S.L., Clausen, H.B., Cvijanovic, I., et al. , 2014. A stratigraphic framework for abrupt climatic changes during the last glacial period based on three synchronized Greenland ice-core records: refining and extending the INTIMATE event stratigraphy. Quaternary Science Reviews 106, 1428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Baillie, M.G., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Blackwell, P.G., Ramsey, C.B., et al. , 2009. IntCal09 and Marine09 radiocarbon age calibration curves, 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 51, 11111150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ren, H.-Y., 2017. A Comprehensive Study of the Paleolithic Sites Discovered in Taihang Mountains. Ph.D. dissertation, Shanxi University, Taiyuan. https://www.globethesis.com/?t=1315330521950084.Google Scholar
Rhodes, S.E., Ziegler, R., Starkovich, B.M., Conard, N.J., 2018. Small mammal taxonomy, taphonomy, and the paleoenvironmental record during the Middle and Upper Paleolithic at Geißenklösterle Cave (Ach Valley, southwestern Germany). Quaternary Science Reviews 185, 199221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rybin, E.P., Gladyshev, S.A., Tsybankov, A.A., 2007. Vozniknovenje i razvitie «otsepovyh» industrii rannei pory verkhnego paleolita Severnoi Mongolii (Emergence and development of flake-based early Upper Paleolithic industries in northern Mongolia). In: Medvedev, G.I. (Ed.), Northern Asia in the Anthropogene: Human, Paleotechnologies, Geoecology, Ethnology and Anthropology. Ottisk Press, Irkutsk, pp. 137152. [in Russian, with English abstract]Google Scholar
Rybin, E.P., Khatsenovich, A.M., Gunchinsuren, B., Olsen, J.W., Zwyns, N., 2016. The impact of the LGM on the development of the Upper Paleolithic in Mongolia. Quaternary International 425, 6987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shizitan Archaeological Team, 2013. Brief report on the excavation of Shizitan Paleolithic site S14 locality in Jixian County, Shanxi Province, 2002–2005. Journal of Archaeology 2, 313. [in Chinese]Google Scholar
Simpson, E.H., 1949. Measurement of diversity. Nature 163, 688.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Song, Y.-H., Cohen, D.J., Shi, J.-M., Wu, X.-H., Kvavadze, E., Goldberg, P., Zhang, S., Zhang, Y., Ofer, B.Y., 2017. Environmental reconstruction and dating of Shizitan 29, Shanxi Province: an early microblade site in North China. Journal of Archaeological Science 79, 1935.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Starkovich, B.M., Ntinou, M., 2017. Climate change, human population growth, or both? Upper Paleolithic subsistence shifts in southern Greece. Quaternary International 428, 1732.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stiner, M.C., Munro, N.D., Surovell, T.A., 2000. The tortoise and the hare: small-game use, the broad-spectrum revolution, and Paleolithic demography. Current Anthropology 41, 3973.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sun, J.-Z., Ke, M.-H., Shi, X.-B., Zhang, Z.-M., Chen, Z.-Y., Wu, J.-A., Zhang, S.-L., 2000. The paleoclimate and paleoenvironment of Xiachuan site. Archaeology 10, 8191.Google Scholar
Tang, Z.H., Du, S.S., Liu, F.L., 2017. Late Pleistocene changes in vegetation and the associated human activity at Beiyao Site, Central China. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 244, 107112.Google Scholar
Tianjin Production Center of Cultural Heritage in Tianjin, Research Center of Chinese Frontier Archaeology of Jilin University, 2012. A report on the reconnaissance of Zhangyantai locality in Jixian County of the Tianjin area. Research of China's Frontier Archeology 11, 19. [in Chinese, with English abstract]Google Scholar
Wang, C.X., 2010. Debitage Analyses and Experimental Study on Locality 8 of Shuidonggou Site. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing. [in Chinese, with English abstract]Google Scholar
Wang, N.L., 1997. New materials of microliths from Tingsijian site of Changli County, Hebei Province. Acta Anthropologica Sinica 16, 110. [in Chinese, with English abstract]Google Scholar
Wang, W.J., Wu, Y., Song, G.D., Zhao, K.L., Li, Z.Y., 2013. Pollen and fungal spore analysis of the hyaenid coprolites from Lingjing Xuchang Man Site. Chinese Science Bulletin 58 (Supplement), 5157. [in Chinese]Google Scholar
Yi, M.J., Bettinger, R.L., Chen, F.Y., Pei, S.W., Gao, X., 2014. The significance of Shuidonggou locality 12 to studies of hunter-gatherer adaptive strategies in North China during the Late Pleistocene. Quaternary International 347, 97104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yravedra, J., Julien, M.A., Alcaraz-Castano, M., Estaca-Gomez, V., Alcolea-Gonzalez, J., de Balbin-Behrmann, R., Lecuyer, C., Marcel, C.H., Burke, A., 2016. Not so deserted paleoecology and human subsistence in central Iberia (Guadalajara, Spain) around the last glacial maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews 140, 2138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar