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Olduvai Gorge
Olduvai Gorge is an
archaeological site located in the eastern
Serengeti Plains, which is in northern
Tanzania. The gorge is a very steep sided
ravine roughly 30 miles long and 295 ft.
deep. Exposed deposits show rich fossil
fauna, many hominid remains and items
belonging to the one of the oldest stone
tool technologies, called Olduwan. The time
span of the objects recovered date from
2,100,000 to 15,000 years ago.
The main Olduvai Beds are
in a lake basin about 16 miles in diameter.
The rocks under the basin date to 5.3
million years ago. There have been seven
major Beds distinguished they are ranked
from oldest to youngest; Bed I, Bed II, Bed
III, Bed IV, the Masek Beds, the Ndutu Beds,
and Baisiusiu Beds.
Bed I dates to 2,100,000
years old and is 197 feet thick. It is
mainly formed of lava flows, volcanic-ash
deposits and other sediments. The upper part
of the bed contains varied fauna and
evidence of the Olduwan industry. Skeletal
remains of hominids are assigned to the Homo
Habilis an Australopithecus Boisei families.
Campsites and what is believed to be a
butchery site have also been excavated from
this bed.
The Hominid living sites
in Bed I are found mainly where streams from
the volcanic highlands carried fresh water
to Olduvai lake. The conditions for the
preservation of the sites is mainly due to
the ash falls from the nearby volcanoes and
the inconsistency of the lake's depth. The
debris found at the sites are various
Olduwan tools, bone and teeth from animals,
mainly from fair sized antelopes. Also a
loosely built circle of lava blocks was
found, suggesting that crude shelters were
formed here as well.
The living sites in Beds
II-IV are normally found in what would have
been river and stream channels. Therefore,
many of the sites were displaced by water
action.
Bed II is 66-98 feet thick
and is 1,150,000 to 1,700,000 years old. It
has two main divisions of rock layer, upper
and lower, that were separated by an
erosional break. The lower part of Bed II is
similar to Bed I. The upper part was formed
after fault shifts had reduced the ancient
lakes size. It is in this part of Bed II
that the development of the Acheulian
industry starts to show. Here also are the
remains of Homo Habilis, Homo Erectus and
Australopithecus Boisei.
The gorge was modified by
fault shifting and erosion. It is after
these geographical changes that Beds III and
IV were created. These two Beds range from
1,150,00 to 600,000 years ago. These two
Beds are separable only in the eastern part
of the gorge and are combined elsewhere into
a single unit. They have a maximum thickness
of about 98 feet and consists mainly of
sediment from streams that fed Olduvai Lake.
During a period of major
faulting and volcanism roughly 400,000 to
600,000 years ago, the Masek Beds
accumulated. They are up to 82 ft. thick and
again contain mostly stream sediments with
some aeolian (wind-worked) tuff. It is
assumed the climate at this time was
probably much like today based on the
deposits found there. There is only one
major archaeological site found in these
beds and it is of the Acheulian tool
industry.
The Ndutu Beds were formed
by faulting, erosion and the filling of the
gorge around 32,000 years ago. It consists
mainly of aeolian tuff. In this Bed two
sites have been found which date to the
Middle Stone Age.
The last of the
archaeological Beds is the Naisiusiu. It
lays in the bottom of the Gorge at what is
now the present depth. It only has a depth
of 33 ft and also consists of aeolian tuff.
It contains one site that has microlithic
tools and one complete Homo Sapien skeleton,
both of which date to 17,000 years ago.
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