Qadi Barmshour Cave is located about 11 kilometers southeast of Shiraz in Fars Province in southern Iran (Fig. 13). The site opens to the northwest and overlooks the Eshkaft-e Goad valley (Fig. 14), which is about 500 meters long and 200 meters wide, where it empties into the Maharlu Salt Lake. Qadi Barmshour is a large cave with a high ceiling, located 1490 meters above sea level. The earliest known archeological evidence for the Eshkaft-e Goad Valley and Qadi Barmshour Cave comes from Henry Field's publication in 1939. Piperno’s studies in 1970s, however, provides additional useful information by describing the caves and shelters of the Eshkaft-e Goad Valley and the lithics recovered during survey. The first systematic excavations at the site conducted by TISARP in December 2020 and January 2021 which yielded promising results. Our test excavation continued to a depth of 1.8 m, and the team defined three main stratigraphic units. The uppermost stratigraphic unit had the highest density of finds, but the entire sequence yielded Paleolithic finds and, equally important, faunal and botanical remains. Based on this test excavation, the TISARP team continued the excavation at Qadi Barmshour in the summer of 2021 (Fig. 15) by expanding the excavation to three square meters to establish a reliable stratigraphy for the cave and to improve the sample size of all classes of archeological material.
Defining the stratigraphic sequence in Qadi Barmshour Cave was perhaps the greatest challenge. After extending the excavation by three meters along the north-south axis, we were able to identify the structure of the sediments and their geometry. As the excavation progressed, the team extended the excavation to a depth of about 2 meters. Immediately below the surface of the cave, excavators began to recover Paleolithic finds. The three major stratigraphic units are characterized by an upper Geological Horizon (GH) 1 with relatively little limestone debris, GH 2 with much limestone debris and often large limestone blocks, and GH 3 with comparatively little limestone debris. Although we do not yet have reliable estimates for the ages of the main strata at Qadi Barmshour, we do have two radiocarbon dates from the 2020 excavation. These dates from the charcoal from GH 1 are older than 45 ka cal BP and appear to represent the minimum age for the upper stratigraphic unit. Interestingly, the majority of the archeological assemblage from GH 1 is dominated by Upper Paleolithic artifacts, suggesting that the lithic artifacts correspond to early Upper Paleolithic use of the cave.
Each of the three main stratigraphic units has produced a rich faunal and botanical record. The faunal finds from Qadi Barmshour are also impressive. Initial studies of the faunal remains have provided important information about past environments and human behavior. Gazelle seems to be the principal game species in all horizons, with equids also well represented. Large bovids are also present in small numbers. Compared to the Middle and Upper Paleolithic sequence at Ghar-e Boof, where caprines dominate the assemblages, gazelles are much more abundant at Qadi Barmshour. These differences in species representation likely relate to the different topography. The research carried out by the TISARP team at both Ghar-e Boof and Qadi Barmshour Cave indicates that the southern Zagros Mountains during the Late Pleistocene offered multiple ecosystems, in which past hunter-gatherers were able to exploit a diverse range of animal species.
All three major stratigraphic units at Qadi Barmshour yielded lithic artifacts (Fig. 16). Diverse raw materials are present in the assemblages with reddish-brown chert as the most common raw material utilized in all the find horizons. The artifacts are generally small, which likely reflects the relatively small size of the available nodules of the principal materials. The lithic industry at Qadi Barmshour Cave is characterized by a mixture of flake, blade, and bladelet technology that includes both Middle Paleolithic (i.e. Levallois blank, Levallois core) and Upper Paleolithic (i.e., bladelet core, End-scarper, retouched bladelets) elements. Regarding the procurement of raw material, the inhabitants of the site mainly exploited locally available raw materials of different varieties and qualities, with the use of fine- to medium-grained reddish-brown chert predominating.
Following the excavation at Ghar-e Boof, TISARP's excavation at Qadi Barmshour Cave, one of the most important Paleolithic sites in the Shiraz Plain, represents an important step towards documenting and the Stone Age sequence of the region. The results of the 2020-2021 seasons at Qadi Barmshour including the outstanding bioarchaeological record and significant lithic assemblage demonstrate that the site warrants further excavation. We are particularly pleased to present the results of the first systematic excavation of a Paleolithic site in the Shiraz region, and we hope that future work at Qadi Barmshour will represent an important step toward future research in Fars Province that will illuminate new aspects of Pleistocene hunter-gatherer lifeways in this part of the Zagros region. We also anticipate that future excavation will establish a reliable chrono- and cultural stratigraphy of the late Middle Paleolithic and early Upper Paleolithic in southern Zagros that will facilitate meaningful comparison with other regions of Iran and southwest Asia.