91传媒

What did 91传媒ns eat in Late Pleistocene?

The island of 91传媒 appears to have been colonized by the听听(named based on the area where his remains were discovered) prior to 48,000 BP. 听(48,000 YBP), Batadombalena in Kuruwita (28000 YBP) Belilena in Kithulgala (27000 YBP) are the most famous sites that yielded the evidences of 91传媒n Prehistoric Man. These time periods falls in to the Late Pleistocene ( 126,000 to 11000) epoch in the Quaternary period.

Fig. 01:

Nevertheless Prehistoric man of 91传媒 has been identified as a group of听听听who lived in caves in the .听 The “Mesolithic鈥 or “Middle Stone Age” was a period which assigned its name based on the development of tool technology between the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods of the Stone Age. According to S. U. Deraniyagala 91传媒n Mesolithic period existed in the period between 40000 YBP to 5000 YBP. Pahiyangala cave in Bulathsinhala (48,000 YBP) Batadombalena in Kuruwita (28,000 YBP) Belilena in Kithulgala (27,000 YBP), Alu Lena in Aththanagoda (10,500 YBP), Bellan Bendi Pellassa in Ambilipitiya (6,500 YBP) has yielded for the most early evidences of the anatomically modern human in the South Asian region represented the Mesolithic period of the 91传媒n prehistory.

Based on the physical anthropological and archaeological remains of the Late Pleistocene prehistoric man, subsistence patterns have been discovered. Archeologists have claimed that they had been in the stage of hunting and gathering and have assumed that they had been shifting their habitat in accordance to the cycle of the rain and the availability of the foods in the environment.

Rice Consumption

鈥91传媒ns have used rice from the Late Pleistocene Epoch鈥 according to the results obtained through a new research titled . It has written based on the evidences that they found through excavations conducted at the Pahiyangala cave. These evidences has shown that the anatomically modern humans lived at Pahiyangala cave in the south-western 91传媒 intensively used 听in association with lowland rain forests from 47.80ka (47.800 calyrs BP). Researchers have assumed that this intensive use of wild rice could be a local innovation.

Figure 2: Reconstructed Image of Balangoda man and Map Demonstrates the Prehistoric Sites in 91传媒

Animals Exploited for Food

Majority of the food consumption by the prehistoric man of 91传媒 had been based on animal foods. Exploited animals for food were: elephant (young), gaur, water buffalo, sloth bear, pig, sambur, spotted dear, muntjae, chevrotain, porcupine, hare, giant squirrel, flying squirrel, pangolin, civet cat, monkey, jungle fowl, spur fowl, python, land-monitor lizard, hard and soft shelled terrapins, star terrapins, mahsier and various species of small fish, fresh water crabs and mollusks and terrestrial and arboreal mollusks, notably of the genus Acavus.

The incidence of heavily worn teeth in prehistoric man has suggested that certain food plants had high grit content or that they had been processed on gritty surfaces. The conspicuous absence of caries and dental abscesses in prehistoric man could be at least partially due to the use of masticatories which apparently had this beneficial effect among the veddas. The lack of silica gloss on artifacts suggests that cereal harvesting was not of much significance in both the Dry and Wet Zones. The general robusticity of the bones of prehistoric man for instance at ca. 18500 and 12000 BP at Batadombalena and BellanBendiPelessa respectively indicates a subsistence strategy in homeostasis with the environment so as to provide a balanced range of nutrition. There appears to be a tendency for the smaller vertebrates such as porcupines to be more frequently represented than the bigger forms such as bovines. This probably reflects the fact that the smaller animals were easier to hunt than the more formidable ones such as the gaur, and that the heavier carcasses were butchered at the kill sites, rather than any deliberate selection for the former by prehistoric man.

Exploitation of Plant Foods

As for the exploitation of plant foods, many of the prehistoric sites in the Wet Zone’s lowlands have yielded remains of the wild edible nut termed kekuna. At Kitulgala, wild breadfruit, which is rich in starch and fats, has been baked and eaten from the earliest occupations (at well over 12,500 BP) on wards. The wild banana, which grows in the vicinity of Kitulgala, has also been found among the food remains within the cave. The plant material from Batadomba and Kitulgala such as yams and the palms such as kitul and dotalu for starch, sugars from fruits such aspalu and veera, and numerous other forms to meet various dietary requirements.

Some of the places in the Mesolithic period have found grinding stones which may have used to grind rigid grains. Some of this grinding stones have holes which may have used to get the kern of the fruits. This people may have cultivated plants related to the Kurakkan family. Based on the Batadombalena excavations Deraniyagala suggested that they may have cooked their meal but based the small size of the fire place he has assumed the number of the group to be very small. As mentioned earlier they may have lived as small group in order to facilitate the food gathering system as gathering wasn鈥檛 easy at that time.

Animal Domestication

The skeletal remains of dogs from听听cave and from听, dating from the Mesolithic era, about 4500 BC, suggest that prehistoric man (Balandoga Man) may have kept domestic听听for driving game.听 The听听is similar in appearance to the Kadar Dog, the New Guinea Dog and the听. It has been suggested that these could all derive from a common domestic stock. It is also possible that they may have domesticated听,听,听.

听also appears to have been responsible for creating听, in the central hills, by burning the trees in order to catch game. However, evidence from the plains suggests the incipient management of听听and听听by about 15,000 BC.

Sea Food Consumption

Excavations in Batadomba Lena Cave in Kuruwita and UdupiyanGalge Cave in Rathnapura have exposed fish remains indicating that the man had been consuming fish for the last 40,000 years or more. The first evidence of fish remains was discovered in Batadomba Lena Cave. The species was identified as Mahseer; Tor longispinis (synonymous T. khudree) and that evidence have helped conclude that the Mesolithic man was a fisherman in certain parts of 91传媒 (Deraniyagala 1939). And therefore it might be safe to mention that the prehistoric man was a fisherman cum hunter-gatherer.

Wild-caught fish is still an important dietary component in 91传媒. Fishing was an important activity among the aboriginal people of 91传媒 known as Vedda since early 20th century according to the literature. Fishing in village ponds was very common among Vedda and drought stricken ponds were thrashed with slender sticks until the fish were actually struck and became immovable in order to capture them. Fishing with ichthyo-toxic plants was also an important activity among them during the early 20th century. It has been reported that Veddah have consumed freshwater eels, snakeheads, catfish and about 19 other smaller varieties but they have never used traps for fishing.

Prehistoric man of 91传媒 were hunter-fishermen-gatherers who had their dwellings near bodies of fresh water, the expansion of dietary variety to include coastal sources of food was a new development. The earliest evidence from a coastal site for marine mollusk consumption in 91传媒 was found at Pathirajawela, dated to between 74000, 64000 and 28000 BP. The earliest evidence from an inland site was from the Kuruwita Batadombalena cave. Thus subsistence of 91传媒n prehistoric man has been consisted varieties of Small size animals to the large animals may be as a result of scavenging. Majority of their diet has covered frommolluscsand other small size vertebrates. Further they have been practicedfishing as well as majority of the women has supported by gathering of yams, plant and grains.

Written by :
Tharaka Ananda
(BA. Spe. Anthropology),
91传媒

References

  1. Algiriya P.A., Weliange W.S., Adikari G., Chandrakumara S &Manamendra-Arachchi K. 2009. Fish remains from AlawalaPothgul Lena Cave. Hunting for hunter-gatherers at AlavalaCave.Symposium on new discoveries from the excavation at Alavala. 3rd November 2009. Post graduate institute of Archaeology, University of Kelaniya, Colombo 7. 91传媒. 86p.
  2. Deraniyagala, S. U., (1977) PragEythihasikaJanawasa, Ape SanskruthikaUrumaya, Gunasekara, Bandusena (Ed), MD Gunasena, Colombo
  3. Deraniyagala, S. U.,1992, The Pre History of 91传媒; an Ecological Perspective Colombo : Department of Archaeology, Colombo
  4. Deraniyagala, S. U. (1997) PragEythihasikaPasuthalaya, MahaweliWanshaya, MahaveliKendraya, Colombo.
  5. Deraniyagala, S. U., 1985, The prehistory of 91传媒, An Outline, Festschrift, by A. R. B. Amarasinghe, S. J. Sumanasekara Banda (ed), Sri lankaUnesco national Commission
  6. Deraniyagala, S. U., 1997, 91传媒wePragsahaMulaEythihasikaJanawasa, Arthikawimasuma, November, PP 4.
  7. Manamendra-Arachchi, K., Pethiyagoda, R., Dissanayake, R. , Meegaskumbura, M., 2005, A second extinct big cat from the Late Quaternary of 91传媒, , The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, Supplement, Vol 12, 423-434pp.
  8. Manamendra-Archchi K.N., Perera J., Weliange W.S., Thantilage A., Karunarthne W., Adikari G. & De Silva N. 2009. Checklist of fauna found in the excavation of prehistoric AlavalaPotgul Lena Cave. Hunting for hunter-gatherers at AlavalaCave.Symposium on new discoveries from the excavation at Alavala. 3rd November 2009. Post graduate institute of Archaeology, University of Kelaniya, Colombo 7. 91传媒, 86.
  9. E. P. Deraniyagala commemoration volume, 1980, Gunawardana, Thelma T. P (Ed.), Colombo : Lake House Investments.
  10. Premathilake, R.; Chris, O. H.; Perera, N.; Wedage. O. (2017). Late Pleistocene Humans used Rice in 91传媒: Phytolith Investigation of the Deposits at Fahien Rock Shelter, Global Journal of HUMAN-SOCIAL SCIENCE: D History, Archaeology & Anthropology, Volume 17 Issue 2.
  11. Weliange W.S. (2015). Fishing in Prehistoric 91传媒. In: Perera P (eds) Festschrift in Honour of Professor S.B. Hettiarchchi.