Anthropology
Related: About this forumArchaeologists Find 200,000-Year-Old Grass Beds in South African Cave
An international team of archaeologists reports the discovery of grass bedding used to create comfortable areas for sleeping and working by Paleolithic humans who lived in South Africas Border Cave at least 200,000 years ago. Border Cave, which is located in the Lebombo Mountains of KwaZulu-Natal, on the eSwatini border, was occupied intermittently from before 227,000 years ago until 1000 CE. Before this discovery, the oldest-known grass bed was 77,000 years old from the Sibudu rock-shelter, also in South Africa ...
Paleolithic people inhabiting the cave systematically placed floor coverings of broad-leafed grass above ash layers, set hearths nearby, and occasionally burned their bedding. The bedding in Border Cave consisted of grass from the broad-leafed plant subfamily Panicoideae and was mingled with layers of ash.
The ash may have been deliberately used in bedding to inhibit the movement of ticks and other insects. We speculate that laying grass bedding on ash was a deliberate strategy, not only to create a dirt-free, insulated base for the bedding, but also to repel crawling insects, said lead author Professor Lyn Wadley, a researcher in the Evolutionary Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand.
Modern hunter-gatherer camps have fires as focal points. People regularly sleep alongside them and perform domestic tasks in social contexts. Border Cave people also lit fires regularly, as seen by stacked fireplaces throughout the sequence dated between about 200,000 and 38,000 years ago. Our research shows that before 200,000 years ago, close to the origin of our species, people could produce fire at will, and they used fire, ash, and medicinal plants to maintain clean, pest-free camps, the study authors said. Such strategies would have had health benefits that advantaged these early communities.
http://www.sci-news.com/archaeology/border-cave-beds-08750.html