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27/06/2012 - 2:00am

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Research at Wonderwerk Cave, in the eastern Kuruman Hills, has generated important insights into nearly two million years of human history. The site comprises a 140m deep cave with a 6m archaeological deposits, as well as a portion of the Wonderwerk farm property. It was ceded to the McGregor Museum as a heritage site and public servitude. It is a declared Provincial Heritage Site and has been graded Grade 1 by SAHRA Council. It was nominated as part of a serial nomination, with Border Cave and Klassies River Mouth, for the tentative list for World Heritage Sites, and this has since been changed to an individual nomination for the site._x000D_
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In terms of the criterial set out in Section 3 (3) of the National Heritage Resources Act (Act No. 25 of 1999) Wonderwerk Cave qualifies for national heritage status on several criteria. Research, since the 1940s, into the archaeological deposits within Wonderwerk Cave has tstified to the site's importance in the pattern of South Africa's history. Some 6m deep, the deposits are estimated to span nearly 2 million years. This includes a long Stone Age sequence from Oldowan and Acheulean to Later Stone Age times, ending with evidence of occupation by the first white settlers, who lived in the cave in the early twentieth century._x000D_
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Wonderwerk Cave exhibits rare and endangered aspects of South Africa's cultural heritage. Distinctive rock paintings on the walls date from the last thousand years. In the Later Stone Age levels (c. 11000BP to <1000BP) some of the older dated rock engravings known from the African continent were found. A fragment of engraved haematite from still older Middle Stone Age levels may be c. 70 000 years old. In Middle and Earlier Stone Age levels, besides a lithic sequence through Acheulean to Howiesons Poort, there is early evidence for contolled use of fire (ash, burnt stone and calcined bone), grass bedding and pigment usage. Together these are suggestive of aspects of behavioural modernity in the emergence of modern humans. Environmental evidence bearing on human development in the region is provided in the exceptionally well preserved animal bones (including species which became extint in early Holocene times, with human agency as a probable contibutory factor) and other palaeoenvironmental indicators._x000D_
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Research at Wonderwerk has already proven the potential of the site to yield information on human, natural and cultural heritage over the past nearly 2 million years. Several different dating techniques and other forms of analysis have been and are being applied._x000D_
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Greater chronological control will provide a basis for a fuller interpretation. The multiple-stratum sequence spanning Oldowan and Acheulean to Later Stone Age times provides a unique record of palaeoenvironmental and human history, including some of the phases during which anatomically modern human forms and behavioural characteristics were emerging._x000D_
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Wonderwerk Cape is unique in the Northern Cape in demonstrating the characteristics of cave sites of this period. It is one of the very few known localities in South Africa with a multiple-stratum archaeological sequence with good organic preservation spanning the Middle Pleistocene. It is one of the very few cave sites containing Acheulean material, let alone Oldowan, while part of its cultural succession also complements the archaeological record from key sites reflecting the emergence of modern humans, such as Klasies River Mouth and Border Cave. In sum, it provides a unique record of palaeoenvironmental and human history in important phases of human evolution, and sheds light on the development of rock art on the African continent._x000D_
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The site has yielded evidence of the development of rock art from Middle Stone Age times to within the last 1000 years. The significance of this, which has continental and even world-wide heritage value and implications in terms of the development of human behaviour, has been alluded to above._x000D_
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As indicated above, the site has yielded exceptional evidence for early development of art forms, while the lithic industries have been pivotal in defining cultural stratigraphies for the interior, where few other stratified cave sites exist, thus demontrating creative and technical achievement. It is indeed one of the few cave sites in the subcontinent with Acheulean levels, also yielding artefacts in a kind of raw material and adequate state of preservation for microwear analysis of, for example, handaxes._x000D_
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While in some senses the site can be said to have universal cultural relevance, the upper levels and the finger painting on its walls would have strong spiritual associations for the Khoe-San people of the region whose ancestry can be traced in Later Stone Age times.

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