
Jerome Reynard
I am a Senior Lecturer in archaeology at the University of the Witwatersrand. My research interests includes subsistence behaviour and palaeoecological change during the Late Pleistocene. I lead an NFR-funded project investigating occupational intensity and environmental change in the Late Pleistocene in the southern and eastern Cape. I also have interests in the bioarchaeology of Khoe-San and Cape Slave descendants.
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Papers by Jerome Reynard
Lower, with subsistence intensification also more evident here than other
layers. Trampling data suggests that occupational intensity was greater in the earlier Howiesons Poort than later phase with little evidence of declining foraging efficiency then. The data indicate that, while humans contributed significantly to the MSA III assemblage, carnivores were the main accumulators here suggesting lower occupational intensity in this phase. The results of this study shows a possible link between increased
occupational intensity and declining foraging efficiency at Klasies River but larger taphonomic samples are needed to explore this relationship further.
Lower, with subsistence intensification also more evident here than other
layers. Trampling data suggests that occupational intensity was greater in the earlier Howiesons Poort than later phase with little evidence of declining foraging efficiency then. The data indicate that, while humans contributed significantly to the MSA III assemblage, carnivores were the main accumulators here suggesting lower occupational intensity in this phase. The results of this study shows a possible link between increased
occupational intensity and declining foraging efficiency at Klasies River but larger taphonomic samples are needed to explore this relationship further.