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111 results on '"lithic technology"'

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1. A new method for quantifying flake scar organisation on cores using orientation statistics.

2. New Oldowan locality Sare-Abururu (ca. 1.7 Ma) provides evidence of diverse hominin behaviors on the Homa Peninsula, Kenya.

3. Can we read stones? Quantifying the information loss in flintknapping.

4. The Initial Upper Paleolithic of the Altai: New radiocarbon determinations for the Kara-Bom site.

5. Unravelling technological behaviors through core reduction intensity. The case of the early Protoaurignacian assemblage from Fumane Cave.

6. The Oldowan industry from Swartkrans cave, South Africa, and its relevance for the African Oldowan.

7. Hominin raw material procurement in the Oldowan-Acheulean transition at Olduvai Gorge.

8. Is there a Developed Oldowan A at Olduvai Gorge? A diachronic analysis of the Oldowan in Bed I and Lower-Middle Bed II at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania.

9. A hidden treasure of the Lower Pleistocene at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania: The Leakey HWK EE assemblage.

10. The easternmost Middle Paleolithic (Mousterian) from Jinsitai Cave, North China.

11. In pursuit of our ancestors' hand laterality.

12. The earliest evidence for Upper Paleolithic occupation in the Armenian Highlands at Aghitu-3 Cave.

13. The earliest long-distance obsidian transport: Evidence from the ∼200 ka Middle Stone Age Sibilo School Road Site, Baringo, Kenya.

14. The Western European Acheulean: Reading variability at a regional scale.

15. Early Upper Paleolithic cultural variability in the Southern Levant: New evidence from Nahal Rahaf 2 Rockshelter, Judean Desert, Israel.

16. Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia.

17. Going the distance: Mapping mobility in the Kalahari Desert during the Middle Stone Age through multi-site geochemical provenancing of silcrete artefacts.

18. The Initial Magdalenian mosaic: New evidence from Urtiaga cave, Guipúzcoa, Spain.

19. Economic growth in Mesoamerica: Obsidian consumption in the coastal lowlands.

20. Distribution patterns of stone-tool reduction: Establishing frames of reference to approximate occupational features and formation processes in Paleolithic societies.

21. The lithic assemblage from Pont-de-Lavaud (Indre, France) and the role of the bipolar-on-anvil technique in the Lower and Early Middle Pleistocene technology.

22. The pattern of emergence of a Middle Stone Age tradition at Gademotta and Kulkuletti (Ethiopia) through convergent tool and point technologies.

23. The behavioral and cultural stratigraphic contexts of the lithic assemblages from Schöningen.

24. Lower Paleolithic bone tools from the ‘Spear Horizon’ at Schöningen (Germany).

25. Crossing the Pleistocene–Holocene transition in the New Guinea Highlands: Evidence from the lithic assemblage of Kiowa rockshelter.

26. On the local Mousterian origin of the Châtelperronian: Integrating typo-technological, chronostratigraphic and contextual data.

27. The archaeology, chronology and stratigraphy of Madjedbebe (Malakunanja II): A site in northern Australia with early occupation.

28. Variability in Early Ahmarian lithic technology and its implications for the model of a Levantine origin of the Protoaurignacian.

29. The lithic industry of Sima del Elefante (Atapuerca, Burgos, Spain) in the context of Early and Middle Pleistocene technology in Europe.

30. A Late Glacial family at Trollesgave, Denmark.

31. Reassessing the Aurignacian of Slovenia: Techno-economic behaviour and direct dating of osseous projectile points.

32. Estimating original flake mass on blades using 3D platform area: problems and prospects.

33. Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic site formation processes at the Bordes-Fitte rockshelter (Central France).

34. Lithic tool management in the Early Middle Paleolithic: an integrated techno-functional approach applied to Le Pucheuil-type production (Le Pucheuil, northwestern France).

35. Unexpected technological heterogeneity in northern Arabia indicates complex Late Pleistocene demography at the gateway to Asia.

36. A sealed flint knapping site from the Younger Dryas in the Scheldt valley (Belgium): Bridging the gap in human occupation at the Pleistocene–Holocene transition in W Europe.

37. Early Holocene blade technology in southern Brazil.

38. Socio-economic organization of Final Paleolithic societies: New perspectives from an aggregation site in Western France.

39. The Middle Paleolithic site of Cuesta de la Bajada (Teruel, Spain): a perspective on the Acheulean and Middle Paleolithic technocomplexes in Europe.

41. Coalescence and fragmentation in the late Pleistocene archaeology of southernmost Africa.

42. Flake variation in relation to the application of force.

43. The effect of raw material on inter-analyst variation and analyst accuracy for lithic analysis: a case study from Olduvai Gorge.

44. Lithic raw material diversification as an adaptive strategy—Technology, mobility, and site structure in Late Mesolithic northernmost Europe.

45. Paleoindian technological provisioning strategies in the northwestern Great Basin.

46. First molecular identification of a hafting adhesive in the Late Howiesons Poort at Diepkloof Rock Shelter (Western Cape, South Africa).

47. Technological successions in the Middle Stone Age sequence of Diepkloof Rock Shelter, Western Cape, South Africa.

48. Coastal adaptations and the Middle Stone Age lithic assemblages from Hoedjiespunt 1 in the Western Cape, South Africa.

49. The Hogeye Clovis cache, Texas: quantifying lithic reduction signatures

50. Evaluating morphological variability in lithic assemblages using 3D models of stone artifacts

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