# Aterian shell beads from the coastal site of El Mnasra Cave (Rabat-Témara, Morocco): Specificities of the north African MSA personal ornaments

**Authors:** Emilie Campmas, Matthieu Lebon, Catherine Dupont, Manon Bondetti, Eslem Ben Arous, Arnaud Lenoble, Driss Chahid, Pierre Lozouet, Ludovic Bellot-Gurlet, Mohamed Abdeljalil El Hajraoui, Roland Nespoulet

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0338785 · PLOS One · 2026-03-25

## TL;DR

This paper examines a large collection of shell beads from a Moroccan cave site, revealing new insights into how ancient people used shells as ornaments in North Africa.

## Contribution

The study presents the largest Middle Stone Age shell bead assemblage in Africa, offering specific insights into their use and cultural context.

## Key findings

- El Mnasra Cave contains 272 shell beads, the largest MSA shell bead collection in Africa.
- Many shells show signs of smoothing, abrasion, or pigment, suggesting intentional use as ornaments.
- Un-perforated shells with use-wear suggest alternative methods of attachment for ornaments.

## Abstract

The use of Nassariidea shells as personal ornaments is attested to an increasing number of Middle Stone Age (MSA) archaeological sites in northern and southern Africa. The chronological extent of this behavior is constantly moving back in time; currently, the oldest evidence has been identified at the Bizmoune cave site in Morocco back to the MIS 6. Although these evidences make it possible to refine the spatial and temporal distribution of this behavior, shell beads remain rare in Middle Stone Age assemblages and are generally composed of several beads, or at best dozens, for each of these sites. This restricts our understanding of the behaviors specifically related to the collection, selection and preparation phases of shells, and potentially limits our understanding of their use. In this article, we studied shell beads from MSA layer US 8 from the coastal archaeological site of El Mnasra Cave (Rabat-Témara, Morocco). This collection corresponds to the largest MSA shell bead assemblage in Africa (272 Tritia cf. gibbosula, 6 Tritia corniculum and 3 Columbella rustica in US 8 with 154 of them showing smoothing of the perforation edge, facet of abrasion, or traces of pigment). The shell bead assemblage of El Mnasra presents features previously observed at other MSA sites, connecting it to a North African cultural context; however, the size of the El Mnasra shell bead assemblage, and the presence of shell sources near the site, allows us to identify specific features that could be related to particular modes of use as ornaments. These specific features include the prevalence of un-perforated shells, some of which show use-wear, that could have been fixed on items without having been perforated. These results provide new insights into the wide range of variants and originalities of shell bead uses over a relatively “short” chronological phase, between 115 and 94 ka and can be correlated with the multistep evolutionary scenario proposed for South Africa. The archaeological documentation presented here shows that El Mnasra Cave provides a significant contribution to the study of culturing the Palaeolithic body in North Africa.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TPO (thyroid peroxidase) [NCBI Gene 7173] {aka MSA, TDH2A, TPX}
- **Diseases:** Perforations (MESH:D057112), DeS (MESH:D005862), death (MESH:D003643), fractures (MESH:D050723), C3 thanatocenosis (MESH:C565169)
- **Chemicals:** charcoal (MESH:D002606), Red ochre (MESH:C000499), limestone (MESH:D002119), cinnabar (MESH:C034211), OSL (-), quartz (MESH:D011791)
- **Species:** Mellivora capensis (honey badger, species) [taxon 9664], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Riftia pachyptila (giant tube worm, species) [taxon 6426], Gibbosula (genus) [taxon 1835352], Nassariidae (family) [taxon 6483], Mytilidae (family) [taxon 6547], Eobania vermiculata (species) [taxon 212653], Columbella rustica (species) [taxon 1981004], Stramonita haemastoma (Florida rocksnail, species) [taxon 134471], Rumina decollata (species) [taxon 145438], Tritia reticulata (reticulate nassa, species) [taxon 1934738], Glycymeris (genus) [taxon 52936], Patella vulgata (common limpet, species) [taxon 6465], Tritia corniculum (species) [taxon 1934904], Tritia (genus) [taxon 1912890], Serpulidae (family) [taxon 51280], Patellidae (limpets, family) [taxon 6462], Nassarius kraussianus (species) [taxon 380003], Arvicanthis sp. (species) [taxon 61158]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

68 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13016355/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13016355