Matthias Blessing
Adress:
Abteilung Ältere Urgeschichte und Quartärökologie
Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte und Archäologie des Mittelalters
Eberhard-Karls Universität Tübingen
Burgsteige 11, Schloss Hohentübingen
D-72070 Tübingen
Research Project
Research on microliths was for a long time mainly associated with the Late Palaeolithic and Mesolithic of Europe and the Near East. Over the past three decades it became obvious that microlithic technologies have been developed in various areas all over the world. Sometimes there appear to be two or even more techno-complexes that carry microliths in the same area, but at different times. One of these regions is South Africa where we can find microlithic technology during the Howiesons Poort (or even earlier), but evidence for microliths in later MSA seems to be scarce before they reappear in the Later Stone Age Robberg complex. Based on the literature the (re-)appearances of microlithic technologies at different times seem to be a phenomenon of convergent evolution. In the case of South Africa this is a highly problematic conclusion, because especially the later MSA and the MSA/LSA transition are not very well defined in terms of lithic technology and typology – even more so when it comes to the microlithic components within the technological systems. With the rich sequences of Umbeli Belli Rockshelter and Sibudu Cave (both KwaZulu-Natal), where the former comprises layers from both the LSA and MSA and the latter forming one of the most detailed stratigraphy for the MSA after the Howiesons Poort, my projects focuses on microlithic artefacts from both sites, in order to answer the question whether or not microlithic technology in the MSA and LSA of eastern South Africa is a convergent phenomenon. My thesis will use a detailed lithic analysis approach of microliths from MSA and LSA layers of Umbeli Belli and Sibudu. It aims to contribute to a better understanding and definition of the changes within the lithic technological systems of post-Howiesons Poort MSA and MSA/LSA transition and the underlying cultural mechanisms of these changes.
Education and Employments
2019 September - 2020 May | University of Connecticut/Universität Tübingen
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Since 2019 | University of Tübingen
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2018 | University of Tübingen
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2015 | University of Leipzig
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2015 May – 2015 July | DFG-Project Eythra (University of Leipzig/Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony)
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2014October– 2015 February | University of Leipzig
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2014 May - December 2014 | DFG-Project Eythra (University of Leipzig/Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony)
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2012 April – 2013 July | DFG-Project Eythra (University of Leipzig/Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony)
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Excavations and fieldworks:
February 2019 - April 2019 | University of Tübingen
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2018 May - 2018 December | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2018 February - 2018 April | University of Tübingen
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2017 October | University of Tübingen
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2017 August - 2017 September | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2017 March - 2017 April | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2016 March - 2016 October | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2015 August - 2015 October | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony Sachsen
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2015 March - 2015 April | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2014 September - 2014 October | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2014 September - 2014 October | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2013 September - 2014 February | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2013 August - 2013 September | University of Leipzig
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2013 March - 2013 July | Archaeological Heritage Office Saxony
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2012 September - 2012October | University of Leipzig
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Posters and presentations
Palaeolithic Mesolithic Conference in London (25-26 October 2018) | In between the worlds? - Getting started with research on the Upper |
UISPP XVIII World Congress (4-9 June 2018) | Lost in Sand - The Upper Lusatian Mesolithic at the open-air site Reichwalde 6/4. |
59th Annual Meeting of the (18-22 April 2017) | Into the wild - The Mesolithic in the remote region of Upper Lusatia. |
Tage der Landesarchäologie (4-5 November 2016) | HAS-99 - Eine mesolithische Großfundstelle aus dem Tagebauvorfed Reichwalde (Ldkr. Görlitz, Sachsen). |
24th Annual Meeting of the (19-22 March 2015) | M. Blessing, Mikrolithen und Risikomanagement im Frühmesolithikum Nord- und Süddeutschlands. |
Publicationen
2019 in prep. | M. Blessing, WW-17 - Die älteste mesolithische Besiedlung aus dem Tagebaugebiet Reichwalde Nochten. Arbeits- und Forschungsberichte der sächsischen Bodendenkmalpflege 59/60 (2017/2018). |
2019 | P. Schmidt, M. Blessing, M. Rageot, Radu Iovita, J. Pfleging, K. G. Nickel, L. Righetti, C. Tennie. Birch tar production does not prove Neanderthal behavioral complexity. PNAS 116/36, 17707 - 17711. |
2018 | A. Renno & M. Blessing, Geoarchäologische Untersuchungen um den Koppenteich im Hammerstädter Teichgebiet (Tagebauvorfeld Reichwalde). Archäologie in Sachsen 6. Arbeits- und Forschungsberichte der sächsischen Bodendenkmalpflege, Beiheft 33, 7-15. |
2016 | M. Blessing, Mikrolithen und Risikomanagement im Frühmesolithikum Nord- und Süddeutschland. In: Neue Forschungen zum Mesolithikum. Archäologische Berichte des Landkreises Rotenburg (Wümme) 20, 7-36. |
[2016] 2013 | M. Blessing, Risiko - Eine mögliche Ursache für Veränderungen innerhalb frühmesolithischer Mikrolithinventare. Ethnographisch-Archäologische Zeitschrift 54, 29- 48. |