26 results on '"Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition"'
Search Results
2. Between two worlds: Cova Eirós and the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in NW Iberia.
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LOMBERA-HERMIDA, Arturo de, RODRÍGUEZ-ÁLVAREZ, Xose-Pedro, AMEIJENDA IGLESIAS, Alicia, DÍAZ RODRÍGUEZ, Mikel, REY-RODRÍGUEZ, Iván, VALVERDE TEJEDOR, Irene, PÉREZ-ALBERTI, Augusto, CUNHA, Pedro P., BAL GARCÍA, Hugo, ALDEA MOREIRA, Xes, LORENZO SALGUEIRO, Cristian, MOSQUERA CASTRO, Tania, and FÁBREGAS VALCARCE, Ramón
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PALEOLITHIC Period , *MIDDLE Paleolithic Period , *NEANDERTHALS , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains , *RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
Iberia, a natural cul-de-sac peninsula, plays a major role in the study of the Neanderthals demise and its eventual relationship with the spread of Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in Europe. The site of Cova Eirós (Galicia, Spain), located in NW Iberia, contains Middle and Upper Palaeolithic levels, based on the cultural remains recovered at the site. No human remains directly associated with those levels were discovered yet. The available radiocarbon dates from the levels 2 (c. 35 ka cal BP, Early Upper Paleolithic) and 3 (c. 41 ka cal BP, Late Middle Paleolithic), point to a late survival of Neanderthal groups in North Iberia and to a relative quick arrival of the AMH, c. 35-36 ka cal BP, with respect to other territories of the Iberian Peninsula. The archaeological record shows clear differences between the Middle and the Upper Palaeolithic occupations, regarding raw-material acquisition, lithic technology and subsistence strategies. The location of Cova Eirós in the westernmost margin of the Cantabrian Rim and in the Atlantic Façade, makes this site a key place to understand the spread of the first AMH and the progressive demise of Neanderthal populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Competing forces: Subsistence strategies and human-carnivore interactions during the middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Northern Iberia.
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Linares-Matás, Gonzalo J. and Yravedra, José
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MIDDLE Paleolithic Period , *CARNIVOROUS animals , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL dating , *SPECIES diversity , *PALEOECOLOGY , *NEANDERTHALS , *PALEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
The comparative assessment of dietary choices as part of landscape use strategies deployed by Neanderthal and Anatomically Modern Human populations in Eurasia constitutes a fundamental avenue of Palaeolithic research. The increasing number of taphonomic assessments enables a better understanding of what remains were brought to sites by human hunters versus mammalian carnivores or raptors. A zooarchaeological approach can further elucidate the spatio-temporal dynamics of interaction between carnivores and human populations in terms of landscape use and prey choice during this transitional period. To achieve this objective, we conducted an examination of zooarchaeological and taphonomic data, carnivore indices, and other relevant variables across 36 Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic sites in northern Iberia. These sites encompass 126 archaeological layers dating from 50,000 to 30,000 years ago. Our comprehensive bibliographic meta-analysis reveals that human occupations by both groups at sites across the region were punctuated by episodes influenced by carnivores. This observation implies that human occupations in northern Iberia during Marine Isotope Stage 3 were generally characterised by instability and limited to short periods, often seasonal in nature. From a zooarchaeological perspective, the combined assessment of taxonomic data, species richness and assemblage diversity highlights that the range and proportion of species acquired by these different human groups are similar, although Anatomically Modern Humans engaged in a sustained trend towards increasing dietary diversification even at sites with assemblages heavily dominated by one taxon. • Debating Diets: Assessing the dietary ecology of Neanderthals and AMHs in ecologically analogous environments. • Holistic Approach: Relevant insights into the temporality of site occupation patterns during the MP-UP transition. • Human-Carnivore Interaction Dynamics in northern Iberia during MIS 3 were impacted by dynamic interaction with different carnivore species in the landscape. • Our methodology encompasses quantitative palaeoecological, taphonomic and statistical assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. The Middle and Upper Palaeolithic at La Crouzade cave (Gruissan, Aude, France): New excavations and a chronostratigraphic framework.
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Saos, Thibaud, Grégoire, Sophie, Bahain, Jean-Jacques, Higham, Thomas, Moigne, Anne-Marie, Testu, Agnès, Boulbes, Nicolas, Bachellerie, Manon, Chevalier, Tony, Becam, Gaël, Duran, Jean-Pierre, Alladio, Alex, Ortega, Maria Illuminada, Devièse, Thibaut, and Shao, Qingfeng
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ELECTRON spin resonance dating , *CAVES , *EXCAVATION , *BONES , *CHARCOAL , *FACIES - Abstract
This paper presents new archaeological material and first dates on Upper Pleistocene layers at the site of La Crouzade cave (Gruissan, Aude, France). The site was first excavated by T. and P. Héléna at the beginning of the twentieth century, and the excavations were recently completed during three years (2016–2018) of systematic campaigns. We obtained dates from Middle Palaeolithic layers using two methods: AMS 14C dates were obtained from bone and charcoal, and combined ESR-U series dating was undertaken on horse teeth. Together, these methods allowed us to date this Mousterian sequence to 49,776–44805 cal BP for the deepest level (layer C8) and from 42,000 ± 3000 years BP for the top (layer C6). The Upper Palaeolithic layers are preserved only as patches in the actual excavation area, but a date was obtained from a piece of charcoal collected from a small hearth preserved in the first layer (C5) above Middle Palaeolithic deposits, which indicates an age similar to that of a modern human maxillary previously analysed and re-dated here from 36,014 to 34402 cal BP, confirming its stratigraphic attribution. The Middle Palaeolithic lithics at the site were first described as para-Charentian cultural facies following typological analyses. The revision of the earlier collection supplemented with the new material, using a technological approach, allow to identify two layers dominated by Levallois production followed by discoid production (Layers C8 and C6) surrounding an original assemblage (layer C7), characterised by a dominant Levallois production completed by three secondary production systems of equal importance, including discoid, SSDA and a Quina-like production. The faunal spectrum predominantly comprises an assemblage of Pleistocene large mammals, and biochronological studies corroborate the dates obtained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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5. Wind of change: zooarchaeological approach to the Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition in Cova Gran of Santa Linya (Lleida, south-eastern Pre-Pyrenees)
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Samper Carro, Sofía C., Martínez-Moreno, Jorge, and Mora, Rafael
- Published
- 2020
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6. Excavations at Ghār-e Boof in the Fars Province of Iran and its bearing on models for the evolution of the Upper Palaeolithic in the Zagros Mountains.
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Ghasidian, Elham, Bretzke, Knut, and Conard, Nicholas J.
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *PALEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
The Upper Palaeolithic (UP) record of the Zagros Mountains is of critical importance for our understanding of the dispersal of modern humans into Southwest Asia. Most researchers interpret the record as reflecting the existence of two developmentally related cultural groups, the Baradostian of the early UP and the Zarzian of the late UP or Epipalaeolithic. In this paper we analyse techno-typological characteristics of early UP assemblages from the Zagros to assess the degree of variability. We use here new chronometric and typo-technological data from the early UP assemblages of the cave site Ghār-e Boof in the north western Fars province of Iran and compare these data with key sites of the Zagros UP, including Shanidar, Warwasi and Yafteh. Our study reveals important technological differences between assemblages from these sites, which led us to argue that the UP record of the Zagros Mountain range reflects multiple technological traditions instead of a single one. We further argue that a model reflecting a mosaic pattern for the evolution of the early UP in the Zagros Mountains fits better with the increasing evidence for a chronologically deep and spatially complex process of the spread of modern human populations over Southwest Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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7. Evidence for chronic omega-3 fatty acids and ascorbic acid deficiency in Palaeolithic hominins in Europe at the emergence of cannibalism.
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Guil-Guerrero, J.L.
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FATTY acids , *OMEGA-3 fatty acids , *VITAMIN C deficiency , *HOMINIDS - Abstract
At the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic (M/UP) transition in Western Europe, hominins depended mostly on terrestrial mammals for subsistence, being pointed out that reliance on reindeer ( Rangifer tarandus ) would have promoted declines in human population densities during that period. Food-composition tables have been compiled for hominins at the M/UP transition, listing protein, fat, energy, different omega-3 fatty acids and ascorbic acid concentrations. These data were used to compute the regular relations between fatty and lean tissues of the main hunted food-animals to meet hominin energy needs. Then, with daily protein intake considered critical, the optimal contribution of the different omega-3 fatty acids from different hunted species to hominin diets were computed. Several faunal assemblages from different human sites at different M/UP periods were used to assess the overall daily intake of the various omega-3 fatty acid classes. The results of the calculations made in this work are quite clear; hominins at the M/UP transition had a deficit of both omega-3 fatty acids and ascorbic acid. Data on human organs summarized here are also conclusive: these contain such nutrients in amounts much higher than reached in the corresponding mammal organs consumed, and thus could have been alternative sources of those nutrients for Palaeolithic hominins. Therefore, nutritional cannibalism detected at such times could have had the function of alleviating these deficits. The evolutionary advantages gained by the consumption of the various omega-3 fatty acids of human origin are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Between two worlds: Cova Eirós and the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in NW Iberia
- Author
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Irene Valverde Tejedor, Xes Aldea Moreira, Ramón Fábregas Valcarce, Hugo Bal García, Tania Mosquera Castro, Arturo de Lombera-Hermida, Xosé-Pedro Rodríguez-Álvarez, Augusto Pérez-Alberti, Cristian Lorenzo Salgueiro, Pedro P. Cunha, Alicia Ameijenda Iglesias, Mikel Díaz Rodríguez, and undefined Iván Rey-Rodríguez
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Aurignacian ,Paleontology ,Mousterian ,zooarchaeology ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,quartz industries ,Northwestern Iberia ,Geology - Abstract
Iberia, a natural cul-de-sac peninsula, plays a major role in the study of the Neanderthals demise and its eventual relationship with the spread of Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in Europe. The site of Cova Eirós (Galicia, Spain), located in NW Iberia, contains Middle and Upper Palaeolithic levels, based on the cultural remains recovered at the site. No human remains directly associated with those levels were discovered yet. The available radiocarbon dates from the levels 2 (c. 35 ka calBP, Early Upper Paleolithic) and 3 (c. 41 ka cal BP, Late Middle Paleolithic), point to a late survival of Neanderthal groups in North Iberia and to a relative quick arrival of the AMH, c. 35-36 ka calBP, with respect to other territories of the Iberian Peninsula. The archaeological record shows clear differences between the Middle and the Upper Palaeolithic occupations, regarding raw-material acquisition, lithic technology and subsistence strategies. The location of Cova Eirós in the westernmost margin of the Cantabrian Rim and in the Atlantic Façade, makes this site a key place to understand the spread of the first AMH and the progressive demise of Neanderthal populations.
- Published
- 2021
9. Marine mollusc exploitation as evidenced by the Gorham's Cave (Gibraltar) excavations 1998–2005: The Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition.
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Fa, Darren Andrew, Finlayson, James Clive, Finlayson, Geraldine, Giles-Pacheco, Francisco, Rodríguez-Vidal, Joaquin, and Gutiérrez-López, José María
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MOLLUSKS , *RESOURCE exploitation , *EXCAVATION , *PALEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
There is increasing evidence that humans have exploited intertidal and shallow-water species for much longer than has been previously considered, and certainly not restricted to Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH). One of the principal reasons for the lack of evidence up till recently has been a lack of consideration for the temporal and spatial backdrop to such activities throughout human evolution, in particular related to changes in sea-level during the Pleistocene (Bailey et al., 2008). This study reports on the marine molluscs excavated from Gorham's Cave between 1998 and 2005, focussing in particular between levels III and IV, corresponding to the Upper (AMH) and Middle Palaeolithic (Neanderthals), respectively. Given that Gorham's Cave was never more than approximately 2 km away from the coastline, it still preserves evidence of exploitation of marine molluscs for food by Neanderthals and in this article the data obtained are compared across the Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition. The results obtained suggest a high degree of consistency in the mode of marine mollusc exploitation between levels, and comparisons with extant communities supports the contention that marine molluscs were exploited in direct proportion to their relative abundance and accessibility. Patterns in shell size distributions for some of the main species exploited are discussed, as are possible anthropic valve selection and the marine climatic signals that can be extracted from such data. The main difference that emerges between Upper and Middle Palaeolithic levels was a lack of evidence of collection for decoration in Middle Palaeolithic levels, but even here the relatively small size of the Level IV sample precluded totally excluding this possibility based only on absence of evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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10. Between two worlds: Cova Eiros and the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in NW Iberia
- Author
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Història i Història de l'Art, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, de Lombera-Hermida, Arturo; Rodriguez-Alvarez, Xose-Pedro; Ameijenda Iglesias, Alicia; Diaz Rodriguez, Mikel; Rey-Rodriguez, Ivan; Valverde Tejedor, Irene; Perez-Alberti, Augusto; Cunha, Pedro P.; Bal Garcia, Hugo; Aldea Moreira, Xes; Lorenzo Salgueiro, Cristian; Mosquera Castro, Tania; Fabregas Valcarce, Ramon, Història i Història de l'Art, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and de Lombera-Hermida, Arturo; Rodriguez-Alvarez, Xose-Pedro; Ameijenda Iglesias, Alicia; Diaz Rodriguez, Mikel; Rey-Rodriguez, Ivan; Valverde Tejedor, Irene; Perez-Alberti, Augusto; Cunha, Pedro P.; Bal Garcia, Hugo; Aldea Moreira, Xes; Lorenzo Salgueiro, Cristian; Mosquera Castro, Tania; Fabregas Valcarce, Ramon
- Abstract
Iberia, a natural cul-de-sac peninsula, plays a major role in the study of the Neanderthals demise and its eventual relationship with the spread of Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in Europe. The site of Cova Eiros (Galicia, Spain), located in NW Iberia, contains Middle and Upper Palaeolithic levels, based on the cultural remains recovered at the site. No human remains directly associated with those levels were discovered yet. The available radiocarbon dates from the levels 2 (c. 35 ka cal BP, Early Upper Paleolithic) and 3 (c. 41 ka cal BP, Late Middle Paleolithic), point to a late survival of Neanderthal groups in North Iberia and to a relative quick arrival of the AMH, c. 35-36 ka cal BP, with respect to other territories of the Iberian Peninsula. The archaeological record shows clear differences between the Middle and the Upper Palaeolithic occupations, regarding raw-material acquisition, lithic technology and subsistence strategies. The location of Cova Eiros in the westernmost margin of the Cantabrian Rim and in the Atlantic Facade, makes this site a key place to understand the spread of the first AMH and the progressive demise of Neanderthal populations.
- Published
- 2021
11. Book review: Seeing Lithics: A Middle-range Theory for Testing for Cultural Transmission in the Pleistocene
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Katie Davenport-Mackey
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cultural transmission ,middle-upper palaeolithic transition ,evolutionary archaeology ,experimental archaeology ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Seeing Lithics represents a doctoral thesis submitted to Harvard University by Gilbert Tostevin in 2000. Tostevin is currently a professor of Anthropology at the University of Minnesota and has written extensively on human evolution, lithic technology, Old World archaeology, and Palaeolithic archaeology. These interests can be clearly seen in this book which develops a new theoretical and analytical approach to the study of cultural transmission in the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition.
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- 2015
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12. Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic site formation processes at the Bordes-Fitte rockshelter (Central France).
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Aubry, Thierry, Dimuccio, Luca Antonio, Buylaert, Jan-Pieter, Liard, Morgane, Murray, Andrew S., Thomsen, Kristina Jørkov, and Walter, Bertrand
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PALEOLITHIC Period , *QUARRIES & quarrying , *CAVES , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *ACCELERATOR mass spectrometry - Abstract
Transformation in technological patterns associated with the Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition between 50 and 40 ka in Western Europe and their relationship with the Neanderthal and Anatomically Modern Human populations and behaviors are issues that continue to stimulate heated debate. In this article we use the Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic archaeo-stratigraphic record from the Bordes-Fitte rockshelter (les Roches d'Abilly site, Central France), a Bayesian analysis of the ages obtained by accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon on ultrafiltered collagen and by luminescence on quartz and feldspar grains, to establish a timeline for material culture and sedimentary dynamic changes during the Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition. Technology, refitting studies and taphonomy of lithic artifacts recovered in the geoarchaeological field units D1 and D2 permit to characterize 3 reduction strategies (Levallois, Discoidal and Châtelperronian blade) that took place between the cold Heinrich events 5 and 4. We discuss the implications of the results to characterize the end of the Middle Palaeolithic, and for distinguishing anthropogenic and non-anthropogenic factors in Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic assemblage's variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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13. First AMS 14C dates on the Protoaurignacian in Mediterranean France: the site of Esquicho-Grapaou (Russan-Ste-Anastasie, Gard)
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Carolyn Barshay-Szmidt, Frédéric Bazile, Jean-Philip Brugal, Laboratoire méditerranéen de préhistoire Europe-Afrique (LAMPEA), and Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Ministère de la Culture (MC)
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Mediterranean climate ,Radiocarbon dating ,010506 paleontology ,0303 health sciences ,Archeology ,Mediterranean France Powered by Editorial Manager® and ProduXion Manager® from Aries Systems Corporation ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,Range (biology) ,Modern humans ,Excavation ,Context (language use) ,Sample selection-methodology ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Geography ,law ,Protoaurignacian ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,030304 developmental biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
International audience; This paper presents the first AMS radiocarbon dates done on the Protoaurignacian layer (SLC1 a+b) of Esquicho-Grapaou, a stratified site in Southeastern France. Previous conventional method radiocarbon dates at this site (mostly on charcoal) done in the 1970s produced too large standard deviations, making them difficult to place precisely in time, but already pointing to the antiquity of this layer. For AMS radiocarbon dating we selected taxon-identified faunal samples of the 1970s Bazile excavation collection. Of six samples attempted, two produced dates. These are the first AMS 14 C Protoaurignacian dates in Mediterranean France. In this paper they are placed within a larger context of recently-dated Protoaurignacian sites in western Mediterranean Europe. The Esquicho-Grapaou dates fall squarely in the middle of these, in the 38.7-41.9 ka cal BP range (95.4%), fully in-line with what is currently known about the timing of Protoaurignacian presence in western Mediterranean Europe.
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- 2020
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14. Debates over Palaeolithic chronology – the reliability of 14C is confirmed
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Talamo, Sahra, Hughen, Konrad A., Kromer, Bernd, and Reimer, Paula J.
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PALEOLITHIC Period , *RADIOCARBON dating , *ANTIQUITIES , *CALIBRATION , *CHARCOAL analysis (Archaeology) , *COLLAGEN - Abstract
Abstract: The debate about the complex issues of human development during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition period (45–35 ka BP) has been hampered by concerns about the reliability of the radiocarbon dating method. Large 14C anomalies were postulated and radiocarbon dating was considered flawed. We show here that these issues are no longer relevant, because the large anomalies are artefacts beyond plausible physical limits for their magnitude. Previous inconsistencies between 14C radiocarbon datasets have been resolved, and a new radiocarbon calibration curve, IntCal09 (), was created. Improved procedures for bone collagen extraction and charcoal pre-treatment generally result in older ages, consistent with independently dated time markers. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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15. A radiocarbon chronology for the complete Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transitional sequence of Les Cottés (France)
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Talamo, Sahra, Soressi, Marie, Roussel, Morgan, Richards, Mike, and Hublin, Jean-Jacques
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CARBON isotopes , *CHRONOLOGY , *PALEOLITHIC Period , *ACCULTURATION , *MAMMALS , *BONES - Abstract
Abstract: The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is the key period for our understanding of Neanderthal and modern human interactions in Europe. The site of Les Cottés in south-west France is one of the rare sites with a complete and well defined sequence covering this transition period. We undertook an extensive radiocarbon dating program on mammal bone which allows us to propose a chronological framework of five distinct phases dating from the Mousterian to the Early Aurignacian at this site. We found that the Mousterian and Châtelperronian industries are separated from the overlying Protoaurignacian by a gap of approximately 1000 calendar years. Based on a comparison with Upper Paleolithic sites in Europe we see an overlap in the ages of Châtelperronian industries and Aurignacian lithic assemblages, which are usually associated with Anatomical Modern Humans, which is consistent with an acculturation at distance model for these late Neanderthals. The Proto and Early Aurignacian appear contemporaneous indicating that this transition was rapid in this region. Anatomically Modern Humans are present at the site of Les Cottés at least at 39,500 cal BP roughly coincident with the onset of the cold phase Heinrich 4. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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16. Palaeoenvironmental forcing during the Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition in central-western Portugal
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Aubry, Thierry, Dimuccio, Luca A., Almeida, Miguel, Neves, Maria J., Angelucci, Diego E., and Cunha, Lúcio
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PALEOLITHIC Period , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *CLIMATE change , *METEOROLOGICAL precipitation , *EROSION , *CAVES - Abstract
Abstract: Geoarchaeological analysis of the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic record preserved in cave, rock-shelter and open-air sites in the northern sector of the Meso-Cenozoic of the Western Iberian Peninsula margin (Portugal) reveals several disconformities (erosive unconformities), hiatuses and surface stabilization phases. A recurrent disconformity, dated to ca. 29,500–32,000calyr BP, in the time range of Heinrich event 3, must correspond to a main erosive event related to the impacts of climate change on the landscape, including a reduction in vegetation cover and altered precipitation patterns, with the consequent accelerated down-cutting by stream systems, slope reactivation and endokarstic reorganisation, causing the erosion of sediments and soils accumulated in cave, rock-shelter and open-air sites. These processes create a preservation bias that may explain why Early Upper Palaeolithic finds in primary deposition context remains exceptional in the carbonate areas of central-western Portugal, and possibly elsewhere in the other places of Iberia. The impact of such site formation processes must therefore be duly considered in interpretations of the current patchy and scarce archaeological record of the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in south-western Iberia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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17. AMS 14C dating the Protoaurignacian/Early Aurignacian of Isturitz, France. Implications for Neanderthal–modern human interaction and the timing of technical and cultural innovations in Europe
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Szmidt, Carolyn C., Normand, Christian, Burr, George S., Hodgins, Greg W.L., and LaMotta, Sarah
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RADIOCARBON dating , *AURIGNACIAN culture , *SOCIAL interaction , *NEANDERTHALS , *DECORATION & ornament ,ISTURITZ Cave (France) - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents new AMS radiocarbon dating results of six ungulate bones from the current excavation of Isturitz Cave, France, layer C 4c4. The assemblage from this layer exhibits a suite of traits closely aligned with the Early Aurignacian, but with some aspects that bear strong similarities with the Protoaurignacian, with possible in situ technological transformation. Accurate and precise dating of the late Middle Palaeolithic and the early Upper Palaeolithic periods is critical to our understanding of the possible relationship between final Neanderthals and early modern humans in Europe. As such, a rigorous set of sample selection and evaluation protocols was developed and used in this research. Among these, only cutmarked bones were selected and a total of 31 targets were made, giving a weighted average of 37,180±420BP for this assemblage and providing a terminus ante quem for the ornaments, decorated artefact and amber pendants beneath it. The implications and importance of these results to debates concerning the chronological relationship between the Châtelperronian, Protoaurignacian and Early Aurignacian and associated debates regarding hominin dispersal, interaction and the timing of technical and cultural innovations are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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18. Environment changes during Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in southern Poland (Central Europe). A multiproxy approach for the MIS 3 sequence of Koziarnia Cave (Kraków-Częstochowa Upland)
- Author
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Adrian Marciszak, Claudio Berto, Arndt Wilcke, Monika Mętrak, Krzysztof Wertz, Maryna Komar, Virginie Sinet-Mathiot, Marcin Szymanek, Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo, Małgorzata Kot, Katarzyna Zarzecka-Szubińska, Magdalena Krajcarz, Maciej T. Krajcarz, Małgorzata Suska-Malawska, and Publica
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Marine isotope stage ,Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Taphonomy ,National park ,Context (language use) ,Archaeology ,Late Pleistocene ,Cave ,Boreal ,cave archaeology ,multiproxy analysis ,Period (geology) ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Stadial ,Zentraleuropa - Abstract
Marine Isotope Stage 3 is considered a period with several climate oscillations that drove the environments to rapid changes. To understand how these stadial-interstadial cycles affected southern Poland, we combined the results of eight proxies analysed in the samples from the old excavations and a new 2017 trench of Koziarnia Cave (Ojcow National Park, Krakow-Czestochowa Upland, Poland) in layers related to Middle Palaeolithic, Jerzmanowician, and Early Gravettian. Among the studied proxies were charcoals, pollen record, remains of malacofauna, and vertebrates (including rodents, birds and large mammals, and ZooMS analysis of fragmented bones). Moreover, sediment samples have been analysed for lipid composition (by Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, GC–MS). Despite several taphonomic issues, it was possible to recognise two oscillations. The first one, reflected in pollen record and lipid analysis, took place during Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) 14 to 8 and included Heinrich Stadial (HS) 4. The second one, recorded by rodents and bird proxies, was related to DO 8/7 to DO 6 and included HS 3. Charcoal and large mammal proxies provided the broad context of our study. The Jerzmanowician occupation was connected with a relatively cold episode in a landscape characterized mainly by grassland and periglacial environments, while the Late Middle Palaeolithic and Early Gravettian groups settled the cave during milder climatic conditions, where environments were open with sparse boreal woodlands. Such trends provide additional arguments in a broad discussion on Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in Central Europe.
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- 2021
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19. Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic site formation processes at the Bordes-Fitte rockshelter (Central France)
- Author
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Thierry Aubry, Kristina Jørkov Thomsen, Andrew S. Murray, Morgane Liard, Luca Antonio Dimuccio, Bertrand Walter, and Jan-Pieter Buylaert
- Subjects
Luminescence and radiocarbon dating ,Archeology ,Neanderthal ,Taphonomy ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,Lithic technology ,law ,Anatomically modern human ,biology.animal ,Châtelperronian ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,Site formation processes ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Radiocarbon dating ,Blade (archaeology) ,Geology - Abstract
Transformation in technological patterns associated with the Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition between 50 and 40 ka in Western Europe and their relationship with the Neanderthal and Anatomically Modern Human populations and behaviors are issues that continue to stimulate heated debate. In this article we use the Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic archaeo-stratigraphic record from the Bordes-Fitte rockshelter (les Roches d'Abilly site, Central France), a Bayesian analysis of the ages obtained by accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon on ultrafiltered collagen and by luminescence on quartz and feldspar grains, to establish a timeline for material culture and sedimentary dynamic changes during the Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition. Technology, refitting studies and taphonomy of lithic artifacts recovered in the geoarchaeological field units D1 and D2 permit to characterize 3 reduction strategies (Levallois, Discoidal and Châtelperronian blade) that took place between the cold Heinrich events 5 and 4. We discuss the implications of the results to characterize the end of the Middle Palaeolithic, and for distinguishing anthropogenic and non-anthropogenic factors in Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic assemblage's variability.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A radiocarbon chronology for the complete Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transitional sequence of Les Cottés (France)
- Author
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Jean-Jacques Hublin, Michael P. Richards, Morgan Roussel, Sahra Talamo, Marie Soressi, Talamo S., Soressi M., Roussel M., Richards M., Hublin J.-J., Department of Human Evolution [Leipzig], Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology [Leipzig], Max-Planck-Gesellschaft-Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Archéologies et Sciences de l'Antiquité (ArScAn), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (UP1)-Université Paris Nanterre (UPN)-Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (MCC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives (Inrap), University of British Columbia, Department of Anthropology, University of British Columbia (UBC), and Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (UP1)-Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis (UP8)-Université Paris Nanterre (UPN)-Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (MCC)-Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives (Inrap)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Radiocarbon dating ,010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Neanderthal ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Sequence (geology) ,Paleontology ,law ,biology.animal ,0601 history and archaeology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,060102 archaeology ,biology ,Châtelperronian ,Mousterian ,06 humanities and the arts ,Archaeology ,Geography ,Upper Paleolithic ,Protoaurignacian ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Les Cottés ,Aurignacian ,Chronology - Abstract
International audience; The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is the key period for our understanding of Neanderthal and modern human interactions in Europe. The site of Les Cottés in south-west France is one of the rare sites with a complete and well defined sequence covering this transition period. We undertook an extensive radiocarbon dating program on mammal bone which allows us to propose a chronological framework of five distinct phases dating from the Mousterian to the Early Aurignacian at this site. We found that the Mousterian and Châtelperronian industries are separated from the overlying Protoaurignacian by a gap of approximately 1000 calendar years. Based on a comparison with Upper Paleolithic sites in Europe we see an overlap in the ages of Châtelperronian industries and Aurignacian lithic assemblages, which are usually associated with Anatomical Modern Humans, which is consistent with an acculturation at distance model for these late Neanderthals. The Proto and Early Aurignacian appear contemporaneous indicating that this transition was rapid in this region. Anatomically Modern Humans are present at the site of Les Cottés at least at 39,500 cal BP roughly coincident with the onset of the cold phase Heinrich 4.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Middle – Upper Palaeolithic Transition at Yabroud II (Syria). A Re-evaluation of the Lithic Material from the Rust Excavation
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Jan F. Kegler, Gerd-Christian Weniger, and Andreas Pastoors
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Transition Paléolithique moyen-supérieur ,Systèmes de production lithique ,Anciennes collections ,Levant ,Excavation ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Lithic production systems ,Old collections ,Art ,Rust ,Archaeology ,media_common - Abstract
The discussion about the Levantine transition from Middle to Upper Palaeolithic is still very intense. Different interpretations of the assemblage from Yabroud II (Syria) make this problem particularly apparent. This article presents the results of our reanalysis, which concentrated on the lithic artefacts from layers 10 to 5. Hence, the updated state of knowledge of Yabroud II allows a comparison to the sequence from Ksar Akil (Lebanon). Acting with all necessary caution that old excavations require, we see evidence for a complete transition from Tabun B-Type via Initial Upper Palaeolithic to Early Ahmarian industries at Yabroud II. Moreover, the cultural change at Yabroud II might be correlated to a climatic event., La question de la transition au Levant du Paléolithique Moyen au Paléolithique supérieur est encore aujourd’hui sujet à de vifs débats. Des interprétations différentes des industries de Yabroud II (Syrie) rendent ce problème particulièrement sensible. Un ré-examen des artefacts provenant des couches 10-5 montre que ces assemblages permettent une comparaison avec ceux de la séquence de Ksar Akil (Liban). Prenant en compte toutes les précautions qu’exigent des fouilles anciennes, nous observons à Yabroud II une transition complète qui passerait du type Tabun B à l’Ahmarien ancien via un Paléolithique supérieur initial. Par ailleurs, le changement culturel constaté à Yabroud II serait à corréler à un événement climatique., Pastoors Andreas, Weniger Gerd-Christian, Kegler Jan F. The Middle – Upper Palaeolithic Transition at Yabroud II (Syria). A Re-evaluation of the Lithic Material from the Rust Excavation. In: Paléorient, 2008, vol. 34, n°2. pp. 47-65.
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- 2008
- Full Text
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22. Raw material procurement and land use in the northern Mediterranean Arc: insight from the first Proto-Aurignacian of Riparo Mochi (Balzi Rossi, Italy)
- Author
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Grimaldi, Stefano, Porraz, Guillaume, Santaniello, Fabio, Università degli Studi di Trento (UNITN), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire méditerranéen de préhistoire Europe-Afrique (LAMPEA), and Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Ministère de la Culture (MC)
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Mobility ,010506 paleontology ,060102 archaeology ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,Rohmaterialien ,Proto-Aurignacien ,06 humanities and the arts ,Riparo Mochi Übergang Mittel ,15. Life on land ,Mobilität ,Riparo Mochi ,01 natural sciences ,Proto-Aurignacian ,Raw material ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Jungpaläolithikum ,0601 history and archaeology ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
International audience; Diese Studie beabsichtigt ein allgemeines Modell einer der von Menschengruppen im westlichen Europa übernommenen Siedlungs-und Mobilitätsdynamiken während des anfänglichen Jungpaläolithikums zu erstellen. Zwei lithische Vergesellschaftungen, welche aus der Basis des Proto-Aurignacien (Einheit G) der bekannten prehistorischen Fundstelle Riparo Mochi (Grimaldi-Höhlen, Balzi Rossi) stammen, circa 41 500 calBP datiert, wurden unter petrographischen, technologischen und funktionellen Blickpunkten analysiert. Die Daten lassen auf das Bestehen eines umfangreichen Gebietes vom Rhone-Tal bis an die zentral-tyrrhenische Küste Italiens schliessen, in welchem die frühesten Menschengruppen des Proto-Aurignacien sich in ihrer Anpassung entwickelt und verändert haben, indem sie Rohmaterialien in einem weitreichenden Mobilitätssystem bewegten. Des Weiteren liefern die archäologischen Zeugnisse verschiedene chronologische Rahmen des menschlichen Verhaltens. Demzufolge sammelten und nutzten die ersten Gruppen des Proto-Aurignacien die vorhandenen Ressourcen, während sie den ligurisch-provenzialischen Bogen durchquerten in einer ähnlichen Weise, aber mit einer verschiedenen zeitlichen Intensität und Qualität. In Betracht kommen zwei Interpretationsmöglichkeiten: entweder spiegelt diese Veränderung des Spektrums der Rohmaterialien einen Unterschied in der Rolle des Fundortes Riparo Mochi im Territorium wider, oder sie belegt eine Population, die besser organi-siert ist, sich mit geeigneten Steinen zu versorgen.; This study aims to provide a general model of one of the settlement/mobility dynamics adopted by human groups during the very early Upper Palaeolithic in Western Europe. Two lithic assemblages-coming from the base of the Proto-Aurignacian layer (Unit G) and from the top of the semi sterile Unit H-located in the east sector (1959 excavation) of the well-known Italian prehistoric key-site, Riparo Mochi (Grimaldi caves, Balzi Rossi) have been dated to about 41 500 calBP. Both assemblages are analyzed from a petrographical, technological, and functional perspective. The data suggest the existence of a large territory from the Rhone valley to central Tyrrhenian Italy where the earliest Proto-Aurignacian human groups developed their adaptations, moving raw material inside a system of long-distance mobility. Moreover, the archaeological evidence provides different chronological frames of human behavior; accordingly, the first Proto-Aurignacian human groups, while crossing the Liguro-Provençal Arc, gathered and used available resources in a similar way, but with different intensity and effectiveness in time. Two interpretations are possible: either this change in the raw material spectrum reflects a difference in the role played by the Riparo Mochi site within the territory or it documents populations who were better organised to supply rocks of greater suitability.
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- 2014
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23. Debates over Palaeolithic chronology - the reliability of14C is confirmed
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Bernd Kromer, Paula J. Reimer, Sahra Talamo, Konrad A Hughen, Talamo S., Hughen K.A., Kromer B., and Reimer P.J.
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Archeology ,Paleontology ,Bone collagen ,law ,Reliability of radiocarbon dating ,Radiocarbon dating ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Radiocarbon calibration ,Geology ,Chronology ,law.invention - Abstract
The debate about the complex issues of human development during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition period (45-35 ka BP) has been hampered by concerns about the reliability of the radiocarbon dating method. Large14C anomalies were postulated and radiocarbon dating was considered flawed. We show here that these issues are no longer relevant, because the large anomalies are artefacts beyond plausible physical limits for their magnitude. Previous inconsistencies between14C radiocarbon datasets have been resolved, and a new radiocarbon calibration curve, IntCal09 (Reimer et al., 2009), was created. Improved procedures for bone collagen extraction and charcoal pre-treatment generally result in older ages, consistent with independently dated time markers. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2012
24. Zooarqueología y tafonomía del yacimiento de Hornos de la Peña (San Felices de Buelna, Cantabria)
- Author
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Yravedra Sainz de los Terreros, José
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Tafonomía ,Cut Marks ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic Transition ,Taphonomy ,Zooarqueología ,Transición Paleolítico Medio-Superior ,Prehistoria ,Zooarchaeology ,Marcas de corte ,Arqueología - Abstract
New zooarchaological and taphonomical data from the Palaeolithic site of Hornos de la Peña (Cantabria) are presented. A bone assemblage from the Institut de Paléontologie Humaine of Paris which is now kept in the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid has been analyzed. The paper discusses some of the problems of dealing with archaeological excavations from the beginning of the 20th century when, as in other early archaeological interventions, only the easily identified remains were selected. The faunal collection analysed opens new questions about the hunting behaviour from the Mousterian to the Magdalenian periods in Northern Spain, namely the different strategies used for small animals (Capra and Rupicapra) versus larger animals (Equus, Cervus and Bos-Bison) in the Middle Palaeolithic, and the high presence of horse in the Solutrean and Magdalenian levels of Hornos de la Peña that differs from the prevalence of red deer and goat in other sites from those periods. Estudio zooarqueológico y tafonómico de los macrovertebrados del yacimiento paleolítico de Hornos de la Peña (San Felices de Buelna, Torrelavega, Cantabria), cuya muestra ósea se analizó en el año 2006 y proviene de los materiales depositados en el Museo Arqueológico Nacional de las colecciones del Institut de Paléontologie Humaine de Paris. Aunque procede de excavaciones realizadas a principios del siglo XX, con un sesgo osteológico motivado por la preselección de los elementos fácilmente determinables, este interesante conjunto óseo abre nuevos interrogantes sobre las estrategias de subsistencia de los cazadores paleolíticos desde el Musteriense al Magdaleniense de la Cornisa Cantábrica. Entre ellos destacan el tratamiento diferencial durante el Paleolítico medio de los animales de menor talla (cabra y rebeco) frente a otros mayores (caballo, uro-bisonte y ciervo), así como la abundancia del caballo en el Solutrense y Magdaleniense, en contra de lo observado en la mayor parte de los yacimientos cantábricos de esta época en los que el ciervo y la cabra son los animales predominantes.
- Published
- 2010
25. THE CAMPANIAN IGNIMBRITE ERUPTION, HEINRICH EVENT 4, AND PALAEOLITHIC CHANGE IN EUROPE: A HIGH-RESOLUTION INVESTIGATION
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Biagio Giaccio, Roberto Isaia, Giovanni Orsi, Francesco G. Fedele, Fedele, Francesco, Giaccio, B., Isaia, R., and Orsi, G.
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Event (relativity) ,High resolution ,Context (language use) ,Paleontology ,Volcano ,Homo sapiens ,Caldera ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Quaternary ,Tephra ,Explosive volcanism ,paleoclimatic change ,Geology - Abstract
The Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) eruption from the Phlegraean Fields Caldera, southern Italy, represents one of the largest late Quaternary volcanic event. Its recent dating at 39,280±110 yr BP draws attention to the occurrence of this volcanic catastrophe during a time interval characterized by biocultural modifications in western Eurasia. These included the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition and the supposed change from Neandertal to "modern" Homo sapiens anatomy, a subject of continuing investigation and controversy. The paper aims to clarify the position and relevance of the CI event in this context. At several archaeological sites of southeastern Europe, the CI ash separates the cultural layers containing Middle Palaeolithic and/or "Earliest Upper Palaeolithic" assemblages from the layers in which Upper Palaeolithic industries occur. At the same sites the CI tephra coincides with a long interruption of occupation. The palaeclimatic records containing the CI products show that the eruption occurred just at the beginning of Heinrich Event 4 (HE4), which was characterized by extreme climatic conditions, compared to the other HEs. From the observation of this concurrence of factors, we advance the hypothesis of a positive climate-volcanism feedback triggered by the co-occurrence of the CI eruption and HE4 onset. Both the environmental and cultural data available for a c.5000-year interval on either side of the event, suggest that a reappraisal of the identity and destiny of the archaeological industries representing the so-called Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is in order. This might force a reassessment of the Upper Palaeolithic notion as traditionally employed.
- Published
- 2003
26. The Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in Hungary: an anthropological perspective
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Tillier, Anne-Marie, Mester, Zsolt, Henry-Gambier, Dominique, Pap, Ildiko, Ringer, Arpad, Gyenis, Gyula, De la Préhistoire à l'Actuel : Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie (PACEA), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Prehistory and Ancient History, University of Miskolc, Department of Anthropology., Hungarian Natural History Museum (Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum), Department of Biological Anthropology, Institute of Biology [Budapest], Faculty of Sciences [Budapest], Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE)-Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE)-Faculty of Sciences [Budapest], Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE)-Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE), V. C. Valdés, F. B. De Quiros Guidotti, J. M. Maillo Fernandez, Huchet, Jean-Bernard, and V. C. Valdés, F. B. De Quiros Guidotti, J. M. Maillo Fernandez
- Subjects
Neanderthal ,Hungary ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,anatomically modern Human ,Western Europe ,Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition ,Bükk Mountains ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2003
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