Robin Dennell. The Palaeolithic settlement of Asia.
Biagi, Paolo
ROBIN DENNELL. The Palaeolithic settlement of Asia (Cambridge World
Archaeology). xxiv+548 pages, 172 illustrations, 47 tables. 2009.
Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-61310-1 paperback 55 [pounds
sterling] & $95. This important volume brings together, for the
first time, the information currently available on the earliest
Palaeolithic of Asia from the beginning to some 100 000 years ago, that
is the period of the supposed appearance of the first modern humans in
some areas of the continent, as the author states in the first lines of
his preface. Although more recent periods of the Palaeolithic are not
discussed in this volume, as one would expect from its title, it is a
monumental work that covers an immense area from the Levant to the very
far eastern Siberian landscapes, and an impressively long period of
time.
The book is accurately subdivided into well-defined chapters, which
make its reading easier; 'boxes' dealing with specific topics,
such as the distinction between the use of the words hominids and
hominins are also provided, which are, in my opinion, of great help to
students, to better understand the meaning and history of some terms
used by previous and present authors.
Great emphasis is placed on sites of major importance, among which
features, for instance, Dmanisi in the mountains of Georgia, which the
author discusses with great accuracy. This can also be said of the
variable characteristics of the human remains from the same site,
difficult to flame into the general picture of the first Homo erectus at
the fringes of Europe, its origin and dispersal.
Although the most important earliest Palaeolithic sites are
described systematically throughout the volume, after an introductory
chapter of basic importance on the 'Climatic and environmental
background of hominin settlement', it is somewhat regrettable that
the early Palaeolithic archaeological records of a few territories, such
as the southern periphery of the Arabian Peninsula, which are supposed
to have played a key role in the first human dispersal(s), are not
reported in much detail. For instance the 1983-2003 Soviet-Yemeni
expedition in south Yemen is not mentioned; it led to the discovery of
multi-stratified cave sites and open-air workshops of different
Palaeolithic periods, recently published by Amirkhanov (2006) after a
preliminary presentation by the same author (Amirkhanov 1991).
There is no doubt that the great scarcity of human remains from the
Indian Subcontinent and other regions of Central Asia makes the study of
the earliest Palaeolithic often difficult to follow, especially when the
archaeological remains are unstratified surface discoveries, and their
supposed chronological attribution can only be suggested on the basis of
the typological characteristics of the chipped stone tools, given the
absence of radiometrically-datable materials. Nevertheless it is also
true that the Palaeolithic archaeology of several areas is almost
unknown for lack of systematic research. In many cases our knowledge is
limited to a few specific regions. If this is the case for Balochistan
or Sindh, for instance, or most of the Iranian uplands, it is also true
that controversial discoveries have been made in some of these
countries; the author could have discussed them in some detail, or
definitely discarded them whenever definitely inconsistent (Hume 1976).
Other important territories are also poorly reported in the volume,
even though they are highly relevant within a wider discussion. This is
the case of the Orhon Valley in Mongolia, which is currently thought to
represent the easternmost limit reached by the Mousterians, while many
discoveries made by the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of
Sciences in the central desert of the same country yielded evidence of
ah impressive number of early and later Palaeolithic stations
(Derevianko 2000).
The question posed by the author on page 468 'Did Neanderthals
inhabit inland Asia in the Middle Pleistocene?' is still waiting
for an answer, as it is the problem of the south-easternmost limit
reached by these individuals, as well as that of the Levalloisian
technique in most of the Indian Subcontinent.
Apart from the few points reported above, the book is well
organised, well illustrated and available ar a reasonable price. It is a
valuable resource for students and professionals alike.
References
AMIRKHANOV, H.A. 1991. The Palaeolithic of South Arabia. Moskow:
Nauka (in Russian).
--2006. Stone Age of South Arabia. Moskow: Nauka (in Russian with
summary in English).
DEREVIANKO, A.P. (ed.). 2000. The Stone Age of Mongolia:
Palaeolithic and Neolithic of the northern faces of the Valley of Lakes.
Novosibirsk: Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography SB RAS Press (in
Russian with summary in English).
HUME, G.H. 1976. The Ladizian an industry of the Asian
chopper-chopping tool complex in Iranian Baluchistan. Philadelphia:
Dorrance & Co.
PAOLO BIAGI
Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Antichita e del Vicino
Oriente, Ca' Foscari University, Venice (Italy)
(Email: pavelius@unive.it)