We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Identification of the sedge Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense and its possible use in the Middle Stone Age at Sibudu, KwaZulu-Natal.
- Authors
Sievers, Christine; Muasya, A. Muthama
- Abstract
The Middle Stone Age deposits at Sibudu contain sedge (Cyperaceae) nutlets, which previously have been interpreted as indirect evidence of bedding. Scanning electron microscopy was used to identify the sedge nutlets through comparison of archaeological specimens with modern analogues. The presence of nutlets of Cladium mariscus (L.) Pohl subsp. jamaicense (Crantz) Kük, a 1-3 m tall sedge with long scabrid leaves, was unexpected and challenges the bedding hypothesis because of the minute sharp hairs along the midrib and margins of the leaf blades. Nevertheless, we argue for the use of Cladium as bedding material, possibly as the foundation on which softer matter was laid. It is possible that the Cladium nutlets and rhizomes may have been eaten and that the plant was also used as kindling or fuel.
- Subjects
SIBUDU Cave (South Africa); KWAZULU-Natal (South Africa); SOUTH Africa; CLADIUM mariscus; SCANNING electron microscopy
- Publication
Southern African Humanities, 2011, Vol 23, p77
- ISSN
1681-5564
- Publication type
Article