Stone
Age India
Volume 63 Number 1, January/February 2010
by Samir S. Patel
Does evidence buried by a super-volcano redraw the map of human
migration?
The great alchemy of prehistoric archaeology is the way it conjures
our story--of modern humans, that is--from bits of stone and bone.
But the tale
of our evolution and migration to every corner of the planet is
filled with gaps and guesswork. Scholars have been trying for
decades to make sense of it. Much of their focus for the Middle
and Upper Paleolithic eras, from roughly 250,000 to 30,000 years
ago, has been on Africa, Europe, and the Levant (eastern Mediterranean).
University of Oxford archaeologist Mike Petraglia sees an injustice
there, which he and a diverse team of
researchers from three continents are working to rectify. Specifically,
they believe that India deserves a central place in our understanding
of the
Paleolithic. Their evidence suggests that modern humans arrived
there rather early and thrived under some unusually grim conditions.
The missing chapter of our story that they have uncovered in
the state of Andhra Pradesh has no clear beginning, but it has
a rare bookmark, a hazy horizon of fine grit that marks what may
be the most important event in human history. And there--around
74,000 years ago, well before Homo sapiens are thought to have
arrived in India--is where we start.
The Jurreru Valley is wide on the bottom and steep on the sides.
Now dammed, in the Middle Paleolithic its river lazily meandered
and fed shallow lakes during the monsoon. The water attracted
people--who they were is a critical matter of debate--and funneled
them through the landscape. They hunted, gathered, and made tools
from stone eroding out of the valley's south side.
But one day 74,000 years ago their lives took a dramatic turn.
A low, distant rumble rolled in from the south, followed hours
later by horizon-spanning clouds stacked like thunderheads. Day
turned darker than night, a chill hit the air, and there began
a blizzard of fine, abrasive
particles--ash from 1,700 miles southeast on the Indonesian island
of Sumatra. One of the most explosive events known, the Toba Volcano
spewed 670 cubic miles of ash 25 miles into the atmosphere. In
India there was nowhere to hide. Four inches of the stuff blanketed
the subcontinent. The eruption also cast sulfur into the stratosphere,
forming an aerosol that scattered sunlight. Some climatologists
believe this touched off a thousand-year cold snap, and geneticists
say humans underwent a drastic population drop, known as a bottleneck,
some time in the Middle Paleolithic. A popular theory puts the
two together; Toba almost wiped us out. Pity the poor people of
Jurreru. Or should we?
Samir S. Patel is a senior editor at ARCHAEOLOGY.
C 2009 by the Archaeological Institute of America