PALAEOLITHIC AND MESOLITHIC CULTURE
Ashish kumar Sahu
Robert Bruce Foote
established the science of pre-history in India when in 1863 he discovered the
first Palaeolithis. Subsequently, in the next two decades many prehistoric
sites were reported in the southern peninsula. But it was only in the 1930s
when H.de Terra and T.T. Paterson undertook a detailed survey of Kashmir,
Potwar and Jammu areas, that the prehistoric research gained importance and a
number of archaeologists began focusing their attention on the discovery of new
prehistoric sites, construction of cultural sequences and reconstruction of
palaeo environments. By the 1960s Indian prehistorians could confidently divide
the Palaeolithic industries of the Pleistocene (Ice-Age), into Lower, Middle
and Upper Palaeolithic on the basis of the shape, size and methods of
manufacture of the principal artifact types.
Lower
Palaeolithic: The Lower Palaeolithic is characterized by hand axes,
cleavers, chopping tools, and related artefact forms. The tools were all made
by removing flakes from a block or core of stone until it reached the required
size and shape.
Bori in Maharashtra is considered to be the earliest Lower Palaeolithic site.
Lower Palaeolithic stone tools have also been found in the Soan valley (now in
Pakistan), and several sites in Kashmir and the Thar Desert. These were known
as the Soanian industries (while the artifacts found over much of the rest of
India were known as Acheulian or ‘Madrasian’) and were dominated by pebble or
core tools and characterized as a predominantly chopper/chopping tools. The
Acheulian industries was characterized by bifacially flaked artefacts – hand
axes and cleavers – along with denticulates, scrapers, spheroids, and picks
amongst other tools. The Acheulian artefacts were made principally on hard and
durable quartzites. In the Hunsgi valley of Karnataka, limestone was used; at
Lalitpur in Central India, pink granite was chosen while in parts of
Maharashtra and Central India basalt was preferred. Belan valley in Uttar
Pradesh, desert area of Didwana in Rajasthan, Chirki-Nevasa in Maharashtra,
Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh are some of
the important sites which have yielded Lower Palaeolithic tools. The caves and
rock shelters of Bhimbetka near Bhopal also show features of the Lower
Palaeolithic age. Majority of Lower Palaeolithic artefacts found in all parts
of the subcontinent are made of quartzite.
The
rivers – Tapti, Godavari, Bhima and Krishna have yielded a large number of
Palaeolithic sites. The distribution of Palaeolithic sites is linked up
with ecological variation like erosional features, nature of soils etc.
The Tapti trough has deep regur (black soil), and the rest of the area is
covered mostly by medium regur. There is scarcity of Palaeolithic sites in the
upper reaches of Bhima and Krishna. From Malprabha, Ghatprabha and affluents of
the Krishna a number of Palaeolithic sites have been reported. In Ghatprabha
basin in Karnataka Acheulian handaxes have been found in large numbers.
Anagawadi and Bagalkot are two most important sites on the Ghatprabha where
both early and Middle Palaeolithic tools have been found. The rivers Palar,
Penniyar and Kaveri in Tamil Nadu are rich in Palaeolithic tools.
Attiranmpakkam and Gudiyam (in Tamilnadu) have yielded both Early and Middle
Palaeolithic artefacts like handaxes, flakes, blades, scrapers etc.
Middle
Palaeolithic: Middle Palaeolithic
industries are characterized by smaller and lighter tools based upon flakes
struck from cores, which in some cases are carefully shaped and prepared in
advance. There was an increase in the Levallois and discoidal core techniques.
In most region, quartzites continued to be used, and in such cases, Lower
Palaeolithic elements continued into the Middle Palaeolithic. However,
fine-grained siliceous rocks such as chert and jasper, were now preferred for
tool-making, and raw material was often transported over several kilometers. Middle
Palaeolithic hominids largely continued to occupy areas inhabited during the
Lower Palaeolithic. But, in some parts of India such as Tamil Nadu, rock
shelters began to be occupied for the first time. The artefacts of Middle
Palaeolithic age are found at several places on the river Narmada, and also at
several sites, south of the Tungabhadra river. The Belan valley (UP), which
lies at the foothills of the Vindhyas, is rich in stone tools and animal
fossils including cattle and deer. These remains relate to both the Lower and
Middle stone age.
The Wagaon and Kadamali rivers in Mewar are rich in Middle Palaeolithic sites.
A variety of scrapers, borers and points have been discovered in this area.
Middle Palaeolithic artefacts have been reported from Chirki near Nevasa and
Bhandarpur near Orsand Valley. At Bhimbetka, the tools representing the
Acheulian tradition were replaced at a later stage by the Middle Palaeolithic
culture. By and large open-air sites along streams on hill slopes, stable dune
surfaces and rock-shelters continued to be used as is evident from the finds
from Sanghao cave in Modern Pakistan, Luni river basin in Rajasthan, the sand
dunes of Didwana, the Chambal, Narmada, Son and Kortallayar river valleys, the
plateaus of Eastern Indian and the Hunsgi valley in the south. Dates for this
period range from around 1,50,000 to 30,000 before present (BP), a period
characterized in general by aridity.
Perhaps the most remarkable group of Middle Palaeolithic sites in the subcontinent
are those in the Rohri hills of upper Sind. The industry is based upon the
large nodules of chert that cap this group of the flat topped limestone hills.
These vast expanses of chert were extensively exploited in Middle and Upper
Palaeolithic times and again in Chalcolithic period; but they appear to have
been largely neglected during the Lower Palaeolithic and again during the Mesolithic, probably for climatic reasons. Extensive
spreads of quartzite boulders, cobbles and pebbles in the Potwar region in the
northern Punjab were used by Middle and Upper Palaeolithic tool makers.
Upper
Palaeolithic: Towards the end of the Pleistocene, around 30,000 years ago,
there was a distinct change in tool types and technology, which could be
related to either changes in hunting methods, or to a more general shift in the
utilization of resources, or a response to environmental change. The technique
of making parallel-sided blades from a carefully prepared core, is an essential
basic element of all Upper Palaeolithic industries of the subcontinent, which
were contemporary with the final arid phase. Artefact types include a wide
range of scrapers, backed blades, points, choppers and burins, and regional
variability in blade technology and assemblage structure may now be clearly
identified. For the first time, bone tools appear in limestone caves of
Kurnool.
Although aridity restricted settlement in the interior dunes of Rajasthan,
elsewhere Upper Palaeolithic sites are abundant. Tools were made on a wide
range of raw materials and were for the most part on long thin blades. Evidence
for long distance transport of fine grained chert and chalcedony is widespread,
testifying to the vast distances traversed by, or interaction between Upper
Palaeolithic communities. The Upper Palaeolithic industries are generally,
characterized by parallel sided blades and burins and other lighter artefacts.
The presence of Upper Palaeolithic artiefacts has been reported in the
Thar regions (though they are more sparsely distributed then those of the
Middle Palaeolithic), at Sanghao caves in the North West Frontiers Province and
in the Potwar plateau of the northern Punjab (both in Pakistan), from parts of
South India, central Gujarat and north-western Kathiawar. An Upper Palaeolithic
blade and burin industry from a group of sites near Renigunta in Chittoor
district, Andhra Pradesh was also found.
The faunal remains of the Palaeolithic period suggest
that the people were primarily in a hunting and gathering stage. The
Palaeolithic people subsisted on animals such as ox, bison, nilgai, chinkara,
gazelle, black buck antelope, sambar, spotted deer, wild bear, a variety of
birds, and tortoises and fishes and on honey and plant food like fruits, roots,
seeds and leaves. Hunting is reflected as the main subsistence pursuit in the
Rock paintings and carvings found at Bhimbetka. The earliest paintings at
Bhimbetka belong to Upper Palaeolithic when people lived in small groups.
Mesolithic:
The Mesolithic and other stone industries of
the Holocene (c.9000 B.C.) in the subcontinent represent a further contribution
of the developmental process of the Palaeolithic. Changes in climate (which
became warm and rainy) resulted in changes in flora and fanna. The hunter-gatherer
communities spread rapidly over India. Microlithic industries associated with
what appear to be the cultures of hunting people, fishermen, pastoralists or
people practicing some form of agriculture, have been found widely throughout
the subcontinent.
Microlithic or small stone tools (their length ranging from 1 to 8 cm)
comprised of tools made on blades and bladelets and include burins, lunettes,
crescents, triangles, points, trapeze etc. which were subsequently hafted onto
bone or wooden handles to form composite tools. Mesolithic sites abound in
Rajasthan (Bagor, Tilwara, etc.), Uttar Pradesh (Sarai Nahar Rai, Morhana
Pahar, Lekhahia etc.) Central India (Bimbetka, Adamgarh etc.) eastern India
(Kuchai in Orissa, Birbhanpur in west Bengal, Sebalgiri-2 in Garo hills of
Meghalaya etc.) and slo south of the river Krishna (Sangankallu, Renigunta
etc.) There is a rich concentration of microlithic sites in the Narmada, Mahi
and Sabarmati valley of Gujarat. The primary excavated site is Langhanaj which
has revealed three cultural phases, the phase I producing microlithic,
burials and animal bones. Pottery appears in later phases at the sites of
Lekhahia and Baghai Khor. Faunal remains of cattle, sheep, goat, buffalo, pig,
boar, bison, elephant, deer, jackal, wolf and a number of aquatic animals have
been found. Since the Mesolithic age marked a transitional phase between the
Palaeolithic age and the Neolithic age, the first tentative steps towards
domestication occurred. At Bagor (Rajasthan), bones of domesticated sheep and
goat, are dated to around the 5thCentury
B.C.
We can have an idea about the social life and economic activities of the
Mesolithic people from the art and paintings found at sites like Bhimbetka,
Adamgarh, Pratapgarh and Mirzapur. Mesolithic rock paintings depict people
hunting game, gathering plant resources, trapping animals, eating together,
dancing and playing instruments. Animals are the most frequent subjects. Other
subjects include animal headed human figures; squares and oblongs partly filled
in with hatched designs which may represent huts or enclosures and what appears
to be pictures of unusual events, such as the chariots waylaid by men armed
with spears and bows and arrows at Morhana Pahar group of rock shelters near
Mirzapur. The colours and brown painted net traps for fishing, and for hunting
small game, highlight the richness of material culture of which no trace
survives in the archaeological record.
The Mesolithic culture paved the way for the Neolithic, where pastoralism and
agriculture supplemented hunting-gathering as the prevalent mode of
subsistence. In the Indian context, there emerges a broad overlap in the
chronology of the so-called Mesolithic cultures and the earliest agricultural
settlements now coming to light in the Indus basin. But, by and large the
Mesolithic culture continued to be important roughly from 9000 to 4000 B.C.
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