Full First Name(s)
Lyn
Title (honorific)
Prof
Academic Qualifications
PhD (1987, University of the Witwatersrand); MA (1976, University of Cape Town); BA (1973, University of Cape Town)
Research Discipline(s)
Brief Biography (English)

Lyn Wadley is Honorary Professor of Archaeology in the Evolutionary Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), South Africa. She directs a Wits-recognized programme called ACACIA (Ancient Cognition and Culture in Africa).  She taught archaeology in the Archaeology Department, GAES, from 1982 until her retirement at the end of 2004. The National Research Foundation (NRF) awarded her an A1 rating in 2017 and this was a renewal of her A-rating awarded in 2011. She is a Fellow of the British Academy and the Royal Society of South Africa, and a member of Society of Africanist Archaeologists (SAfA), Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf),  Association of Southern African Professional Archaeologists (ASAPA) and Southern African Society for Quaternary Research (SASQUA).

Her speciality is the African Stone Age: Middle Stone Age (which lasted from approximately 300,000 to 25,000 years ago) and Later Stone Age (the last 25,000 years). She began her career researching social and ecological issues during the past 25,000 years of the Later Stone Age in southern Africa. Data for her interpretations were obtained from sites in Namibia and South Africa.  In particular, her Later Stone Age research centred on demographic mobility. She directed excavations at a suite of Holocene sites in the Magaliesberg, and subsequently spent eleven years excavating Rose Cottage Cave in the eastern Free State. Rose Cottage has a cultural sequence, beginning almost 100,000 years ago, with pulses of occupation until about 500 years ago. She is best known for her Middle Stone Age excavations in the rock shelter, Sibudu, KwaZulu-Natal, 1998 - 2011. This site has exceptional organic preservation. Final Middle Stone Age occupations of about 38,000 years ago are at the top of the sequence and the site has been excavated into deep layers with an age of approximately 77,000 years ago. The earliest occupations have not yet been reached. By the end of 2016, Sibudu was the subject of well over 100 peer-reviewed scientific papers, many of which are authored or co-authored by international collaborators. Amongst the novel data from the site is the oldest evidence for plant bedding and medicinal plant use in the world. Lyn Wadley is now part of the team re-excavating Border Cave in KwaZulu-Natal and here she is concentrating on analysis of botanical remains.

Lyn Wadley’s current research is dedicated to the cognition of people who lived in the Middle Stone Age. She has conducted many experiments in order to replicate activities observed in the Middle Stone Age. This work includes heat treatment of rocks, ochre and seeds, and hafting of stone tools with compound adhesives made from natural products like ochre and plant gum. Such replications enable interpretations of the cognitive abilities of people who used the various technologies. Many daily activities of people in the past are appropriate proxies for cognitive attributes

Job Title
Honorary Professor
Primary Organisation
University of the Witwatersrand
Website Address for Primary Organisation
African Country
South Africa
African Region
Southern Africa

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