A complete catalog of Oldowan sites would be too extensive for listing here. Some of the better-known sites include the following:
Africa Ethiopia dating to 1.7 million years BP, from
Melka Kunture, Ethiopia
Afar Triangle Sites in the
Gona river system in the
Hadar region of the
Afar triangle, excavated by Helene Roche, J. W. Harris and Sileshi Semaw, yielded some of the oldest known Oldowan assemblages, dating to about 2.6 million years ago. Raw material analysis done by Semaw showed that some assemblages in this region are biased towards a certain material (e.g.: 70% of the artifacts at sites EG10 and EG12 were composed of
trachyte) indicating a selectivity in the quality of stone used. Recent excavations have yielded tools in association with cut-marked bones, indicating that Oldowan were used in meat-processing or -acquiring activities.
Omo River basin The second oldest known Oldowan tool site comes from the
Shungura Formation of the
Omo River basin. This formation documents the sediments of the
Plio-Pleistocene and provides a record of the hominins that lived there. Lithic assemblages have been classified as Oldowan in members E and F in the lower Omo basin. Although there have been lithic assemblages found in multiple sites in these areas, only the Omo sites 57 and 123 in member F are accepted as hominin lithic remains. The assemblages at Omo sites 71 and 84 in member E do not show evidence of hominin modification and are therefore classified as natural assemblages. The tools are never found in direct association with the hominins, but archaeologists believe that they would be the strongest candidates for tool manufacture. There are no hominins in those layers, but the same layers elsewhere in the Omo valley contain
Paranthropus and early
Homo fossils.
Paranthropus occurs in the preceding layers. In the last layer at 1.4 million years ago is only
Homo erectus.
Egypt Along the
Nile River, within the 100-foot terrace, evidence of
Chellean or Oldowan cultures has been found.
Algeria In November 2018
Science published a report of Oldowan artefacts in a secure dating context of 1.9 to 2.4 Ma from Ain Boucherit (Ain Hanech) in
Setif.
Kenya Homa Peninsula Kanjera South, part of the Kanjera site complex, and Nyayanga are located on the
Homa Peninsula. Kanjera South is estimated to around 2 Ma. while Nyayanga is estimated to 2.9 Ma. One of the significant excavations, in the area, is Leakey's expedition in 1932–35. At the site, freehand flaking was observed to be the most common type of technique for making these tools. A common theme among sites in West Turkana is the high percentage of small flake tools gathered in the assemblages. However, NY2 seems to lack many of these tools, indicating a low productivity rate of flakes.
Tanzania Olduvai Gorge , some 1.8 million years old The Oldowan industry is named after discoveries made in the
Olduvai Gorge of
Tanzania in east Africa by the Leakey family, primarily
Mary Leakey, but also her husband
Louis and their son,
Richard. Mary Leakey organized a typology of Early Pleistocene stone tools, which developed Oldowan tools into three chronological variants, A, B and C. Developed Oldowan B is of particular interest due to changes in morphology that appear to have been driven mostly by the short term availability of a chert resource from 1.65 to 1.53 Ma. The flaking properties of this new resource resulted in considerably more core reduction and a higher prevalence of flake retouch. Similar tools had already been found in various locations in Europe and Asia for some time, where they were called Chellean and
Abbevillian. The oldest tool sites are in the
East African Rift system, on the sediments of ancient streams and lakes. This is consistent with what we surmise of the
evolution of man.
South Africa Abbé Breuil was the first recognized archaeologist to go on record to assert the existence of Oldowan tools. While his description was for "Chello-
Abbevillean" tools, and post-dated Leakey's finds at
Olduvai Gorge by at least ten years, his descriptions nonetheless represented the scholarly acceptance of this technology as legitimate. These findings were cited as being from the location of the
Vaal River, at
Vereeniging, and Breuil noted the distinct absence of a significant number of cores, suggesting a "portable culture". At the time, this was considered very significant, as portability supported the conclusion that the Oldowan tool-makers were capable of planning for future needs, by creating the tools in a location which was distant from their use.
Swartkrans The
Swartkrans site is a cave filled with layered fossil-bearing limestone deposits. Oldowan is found in Member 1 Lower Bank at 2.2-1.8 Ma in association with
Paranthropus robustus and a single fossil attributed to
Homo . The Member I assemblage also includes a shaft of pointed bone polished at the pointed end. Member I contained a high percentage of
primate remains compared to other animal remains, which did not fit the hypothesis that
H. habilis or
P. robustus lived in the cave. C. K. Brain conducted a more detailed study and discovered the cave had been the abode of leopards, who preyed on the hominins.
Sterkfontein Another site of limestone caves is
Sterkfontein, found in South Africa. This site contains a large number of not only Oldowan tools, but also early
Acheulean technology.
Drimolen The cave site of Drimolen has yielded 6 stone tools attributed to the Oldowan as well as 65 bone tools, along with specimens of
Paranthropus robustus and
Homo erectus Europe Georgia paleontological site (right, 1.8 mya, replica), compared with the more recent
Acheulean technology (left) In 1999 and 2002, two
Homo erectus skulls (
H. georgicus) were discovered at
Dmanisi in southern Georgia. The archaeological layer in which the human remains, hundreds of Oldowan stone tools, and numerous animal bones were unearthed is dated approximately 1.83-1.6 Ma. The site yields the earliest unequivocal evidence for presence of early humans outside the African continent.
Bulgaria At
Kozarnika, in the ground layers, dated to 1.6-1.4 Ma, archaeologists have discovered a human molar tooth, lower palaeolithic assemblages that belong to a core-and-flake non-Acheulian industry and incised bones that may be the earliest example of human
symbolic behaviour.
Russia and Muhkay-2 (
North Caucasus,
Daghestan) are the extraordinary sites in relation to date and the culture. Geological and geomorphological data, palynological studies and paleomagnetic testing unequivocally point to
Early Pleistocene (Eopleistocene), indicating the age of the sites as being within the range of 1.8 – 1.2 Ma. The presence of numerous fish and beaver fossils near the stone tools indicate the existence of a body of water at the site.
Pakistan In
Pakistan, Oldowan tools have been found at Riwat during a 1980s excavation. Many of the stones found at this site were considered waste products of stone tool production, as they were small flakes chipped off of larger stones. In total, 1,479 tools and flakes were discovered at this site.
Syria An excavated site at El Kowm (Aïn al Fil, (
:de:Aïn al Fil)), Syria revealed a plethora of Oldowan tools. In a 2m2 test pit excavated in 2008, 790 artifacts were found, with many pebble tools, cores, flakes, manuports, and flake debris. Although many of these tools show little sign of modification, several of the pebble tools are distinctly-shaped bifacial and trifacial choppers. Dated between 2.0 and 1.8 Ma, these stone tools are some of the earliest Near East finds. Because of their location in the Syrian desert, these tools have raised questions about the path of early hominin dispersal. The predominant theory that early hominins traveled along the Mediterranean, through what is now Israel, into Europe has been challenged, as the presence of these Oldowan tools indicate that an alternate route may have been taken. leading to a new perspective on the capabilities of invention and adaptability of Oldowan hominin populations. Another key find at the Bizat Ruhama site was that of the secondary flakes. The discovery of these secondary flakes have led researchers to believe that this was an intentional response to a raw material constraint. According to the micro-morphological studies at the Bizat Ruhama site, the archaeological assemblages represent one or several occupations of the site in a relatively short time frame. ==Notes==