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Sibudu, Ancient South African Settlement, Shows Ancestors Used Insect Repellent Plants

By DONNA BRYSON   12/ 8/11 02:00 PM ET   AP

JOHANNESBURG -- Tens of thousands of years before scientists had realized, our ancestors in what is now South Africa were making their homes safer and more comfortable with grasses and leaves we still use today, researchers said in an article published Friday in the journal Science.

Lyn Wadley of Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand, who led an international team of researchers, said mats believed used for bedding and work surfaces fit other findings that show modern man evolved in Africa.

The hunter gatherers she has been studying "were the ancestors of all of us," Wadley said in an interview. "They were modern humans."

Her fossilized evidence was found at an ancient cliff shelter known as Sibudu, near the western South African city of Durban, where Wadley has been working since 1998.

Some of the plants used had properties that repelled disease-carrying flies and mosquitoes, Wadley said. She said their use showed the Sibudu people were working to prevent disease, and that she expects to find evidence they also consumed the plants as medicines.

"Early use of herbal medicines may have awarded selective advantages to humans, and the use of such plants implies a new dimension to the behavior of early humans at this time," she and her colleagues wrote in the Science article.

Nick Barton, of Oxford's Institute of Archaeology, said work by Wadley and others in southern Africa and his own work in North Africa "is all sort of building up to present a very coherent picture" of how and where modern man evolved. Barton, who was not involved in Wadley's work, helped uncover some of the world's earliest shell ornaments in a limestone cave in Morocco.

Marlize Lombard, an anthropologist from the University of Johannesburg, has researched indications that ancient Sibudu people used bows and arrows, complex technology. She said the bedding Wadley found during unrelated research also was not simple, consisting of layers of grass and leaves.

The weapons and the bedding "show that people then already had very advanced ways of thinking about things, doing things," Lombard said.

Like people today, she said, they "did not always choose the simplest solutions."

Wadley said that while shell beads and other findings that indicate how early humans thought about themselves and their environment may be more glamorous, her bedding and evidence about how plants were processed to create it are a window on a community's day-to-day life.

The earliest mats are about 77,000 years old, around the time other research shows early Africans were using shell beads, engraving, and innovative stone technology. The mats are some 50,000 years older than other examples of plant bedding found in Spain, Israel and elsewhere in South Africa.

Mats are still woven from plant materials for bedding and work surfaces in South Africa. The cryptocarya plant the Sibudu people used is still used in traditional pain killers and other medicines, Wadley said. She said it's also the basis of some modern cancer treatments.

Wadley said the Sibudu people, who looked very much like today's humans, let their mats pile up over time, periodically burning them, perhaps to get rid of pests and clear space for new bedding.

For all their modern ways, she said, "nobody took the garbage out."

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JOHANNESBURG -- Tens of thousands of years before scientists had realized, our ancestors in what is now South Africa were making their homes safer and more comfortable with grasses and leaves we still...
JOHANNESBURG -- Tens of thousands of years before scientists had realized, our ancestors in what is now South Africa were making their homes safer and more comfortable with grasses and leaves we still...
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02:41 PM on 12/09/2011
anyone know which plants they used?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
10:22 PM on 12/09/2011
I admit i would purchase a set of "Plants with Solutions for Humans...For Dummies" in a heartbeat.

Oo my I'm feeling a little 2012 rumbly. It's just the news...that's all...definitely the news...

I'll buy that book, too. "How to Cope with the New AmeriCorp for Dummies." oo really rumbly
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
01:48 PM on 12/09/2011
None of this is surprising. What frustrates me is how little our modern society understands or respects the extent of the knowledge and wisdom of aboriginal people from whom we descend. Instead we do nothing but undermine the aborigines who still hang on. We cut down their forests for our wood and our soy. Worst of all, we consider ourselves superior and more evolved, robbing ourselves of the medicines and other riches that are part of their environments..
10:50 PM on 12/08/2011
Woah, insect repellent?! What an advanced society they had!
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
10:14 PM on 12/08/2011
That is one of the coolest things that I have ever read. i knew our ancestors used plants for all kinds of medicines, cleaners, and so forth, but I didn't realize they knew how to use them for insect repellents too, and certainly not so very long ago.
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Daniel Zook
Just an observant Millenial.
09:46 AM on 12/09/2011
But it surprisingly cant be to unbelievable. If you think about it, the only difference between us now and our ancestors is that we have the technology to even further study basic observation. And if our minds were able to evolve to the complexities we live with today, than it cannot really be to farfetched that our ancestors were just as smart about using the resources provided for them.
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
03:35 PM on 12/09/2011
I think this puts a new light on the age at which our ancestors became fully human. Certainly these people were, if they were smart enough to think of this.
09:27 PM on 12/08/2011
I believe Durban is in eastern South Africa. It's the seasons that are reversed in the southern hemisphere, not the compass points.
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Ngonyama
Major prolation, perfect mode
09:47 PM on 12/08/2011
You're right.