Plovers Lake
Basic information
Sample name: Plovers Lake

Reference: D. J. de Ruiter, J. K. Brophy, P. J. Lewis, S. E. Churchill, and L. R. Berger. 2008. Faunal assemblage composition and paleoenvironment of Plovers Lake, a Middle Stone Age locality in Gauteng Province, South Africa. Journal of Human Evolution 55(6):1102-1117 [ER 3718]
Geography
Country: South Africa

State: Gauteng



Coordinate: 25° 58' 38" S, 27° 46' 37" E
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Time interval: Late Pleistocene

Max Ma: 0.0812

Min Ma: 0.07

Age basis: ESR

Geography comments: "Plovers Lake is located in the Bloubank Valley of the Krugersdorp District of Gauteng Province, South Africa, approximately 45 km northwest of Johannesburg".
U-series dating on two flowstone layers bracketing the main depositional unit constrain the age of the assemblage to between 88.7 ± 1.6 ka and 62.9 ± 1.3 ka. "A single isochron ESR date of 75.6 ± 5.6 ka was produced from a bovid tooth extracted from approximately 20 cm below the upper flowstone layer", with an error range of 70.0–81.2 ka.

Environment
Lithology: limestone

Taphonomic context: carnivore accumulation,cave

Archaeology: stone tools

Habitat comments: "Plovers Lake is a dolomitic cave infill with two principal fossiliferous deposits": an internal deposit and a much older (c. 1 Ma) external deposit. "The internal deposit is comprised mainly of loosely calcified sediments with abundant faunal and archaeological materials. There are two discrete faunal assemblages of this deposit, a relatively undisturbed in situ component (FBU1), and a more heavily disturbed ex situ component above (PDU)".
"It is hypothesised that the PDU materials actually represent a disturbed component of the in situ FBU1 deposit that was displaced by miners. The two assemblages evince similar taxonomic representation, and the similarity in skeletal part representation supports a common origin for the two assemblages from the FBU1 sediments". As such, "the two assemblages represent a single faunal entity".
"Stone tools are present throughout, alongside human skeletal remains in FBU1". The tools consist of a total of 2072 lithic pieces, of which 1449 are undiagnostic chunks and debitage and 623 are identifiable cores, flakes, blades, and flake-blades".
Despite the presence of stone tools, human skeletal material, and some cut-marked bone, such "indications are too rare to consider Plovers Lake a human occupation site. Instead, a high abundance of carnivores, coprolites, and carnivore damaged bones point to brown hyenas as the principal, though not exclusive, bone accumulating agent".

Methods
Life forms: carnivores,primates,rodents,ungulates,other large mammals,other small mammals,birds,lizards,snakes,turtles,fishes

Sampling methods: quarry,screenwash

Sample size: 1739 specimens

Years: 2002 - 2004

Sampling comments: "Excavations of the Plovers Lake internal deposit were conducted from 2002–2004".
The PDU materials were excavated from two areas: above the upper flowstone inside the cave, and scattered in the vicinity of the entrance to the cave. After clearing the PDU sediments, portions of the capping Flowstone I were removed to allow access to the in situ FBU1 materials. Excavation proceeded using a point-provenience system whereby each skeletal element and artifact was individually plotted using an infrared theodolite. Sediments were sieved through a series of descending-size screens down to 0.4 mm, allowing for total recovery of all materials, including microfauna".

Metadata
Sample number: 3942

Contributor: Benjamin Carter

Enterer: Benjamin Carter

Created: 2022-04-01 13:42:20

Modified: 2022-04-05 07:12:36

Abundance distribution
54 species
14 singletons
total count 1739
geometric series index: 90.6
Fisher's α: 10.569
geometric series k: 0.8869
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.8404
Shannon's H: 2.4147
Good's u: 0.9920
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
Register
Homo sapiens764 kg
Papio ursinus120 kg
Chlorocebus aethiops1 frugivore-folivore
Felis lybica84.5 kg carnivore
Panthera leo1147 kg carnivore
Panthera pardus633 kg carnivore
also 14 Felidae indet.
Parahyaena brunnea1748 kg carnivore
Crocuta crocuta366 kg carnivore
also 4 Hyaenidae indet.
Lycaon pictus526 kg carnivore
Canis mesomelas1567.9 kg carnivore
Vulpes chama312.7 kg carnivore-frugivore
Otocyon megalotis33.2 kg frugivore-invertivore
also 72 Canidae indet.
Atilax paludinosus42.8 kg invertivore-carnivore
Suricata suricatta2663 g invertivore-carnivore
Genetta tigrina71.7 kg invertivore-carnivore
also 34 Viverridae indet.
Herpestes sanguineus2465 g carnivore-insectivore
"Galarella sanguinea"
Cynictis penicillata2910 g insectivore-carnivore
Mungos mungo11.5 kg insectivore-carnivore
Ictonyx striatus3753 g invertivore-carnivore
Mellivora capensis17.7 kg carnivore-invertivore
Aonyx capensis214 kg invertivore-carnivore
also 1 Mustelidae indet.
Procavia capensis5802.8 kg browser
Equus quagga burchellii64279 kg grazer
"Equus burchelli"
Phacochoerus africanus382 kg grazer-browser
also 2 Suidae indet.
Hippopotamus sp.1
Megalotragus sp.2
Connochaetes taurinus9202 kg grazer-browser
also 118 Alcelaphinae indet.
Damaliscus niro1
Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi15983 kg grazer-browser
"Damaliscus dorcas"
Antidorcas marsupialis8540 kg browser-grazer
Antidorcas bondi71
Raphicerus campestris99.7 kg browser-grazer
Hippotragus sp.4
Redunca fulvorufula1029 kg
Taurotragus oryx2393 kg browser-grazer
Tragelaphus strepsiceros6189 kg browser-grazer
Syncerus caffer4548 kg grazer-browser
Pelea capreolus616 kg grazer
also 1457 Bovidae indet.
Hystrix africaeaustralis2815 kg browser
Lepus sp.155
Aethomys chrysophilus8
Dendromus melanotis1
Mystromys albicaudatus3
Otomys irroratus10
Mastomys natalensis1
"Praomys natalensis"
Steatomys pratensis1
Gerbilliscus sp.1
"Tatera sp."
Cryptomys hottentotus1
Crocidura sp.10
Varanus cf. niloticus4
also 3 "lizard" indet.
Serpentes indet.1
Testudines indet.5
Aves indet.230
Osteichthyes indet.1