نتایج جستجو برای: neolithic

تعداد نتایج: 3054  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2017
Corina Knipper Alissa Mittnik Ken Massy Catharina Kociumaka Isil Kucukkalipci Michael Maus Fabian Wittenborn Stephanie E Metz Anja Staskiewicz Johannes Krause Philipp W Stockhammer

Human mobility has been vigorously debated as a key factor for the spread of bronze technology and profound changes in burial practices as well as material culture in central Europe at the transition from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. However, the relevance of individual residential changes and their importance among specific age and sex groups are still poorly understood. Here, we present a...

2013
Claudio Ottoni Linus Girdland Flink Allowen Evin Christina Geörg Bea De Cupere Wim Van Neer László Bartosiewicz Anna Linderholm Ross Barnett Joris Peters Ronny Decorte Marc Waelkens Nancy Vanderheyden François-Xavier Ricaut Canan Çakırlar Özlem Çevik A. Rus Hoelzel Marjan Mashkour Azadeh Fatemeh Mohaseb Karimlu Shiva Sheikhi Seno Julie Daujat Fiona Brock Ron Pinhasi Hitomi Hongo Miguel Perez-Enciso Morten Rasmussen Laurent Frantz Hendrik-Jan Megens Richard Crooijmans Martien Groenen Benjamin Arbuckle Nobert Benecke Una Strand Vidarsdottir Joachim Burger Thomas Cucchi Keith Dobney Greger Larson

Zooarcheological evidence suggests that pigs were domesticated in Southwest Asia ~8,500 BC. They then spread across the Middle and Near East and westward into Europe alongside early agriculturalists. European pigs were either domesticated independently or more likely appeared so as a result of admixture between introduced pigs and European wild boar. As a result, European wild boar mtDNA lineag...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Mian Zhao Qing-Peng Kong Hua-Wei Wang Min-Sheng Peng Xiao-Dong Xie Wen-Zhi Wang Jiayang Jian-Guo Duan Ming-Cui Cai Shi-Neng Zhao Cidanpingcuo Yuan-Quan Tu Shi-Fang Wu Yong-Gang Yao Hans-Jürgen Bandelt Ya-Ping Zhang

Due to its numerous environmental extremes, the Tibetan Plateau--the world's highest plateau--is one of the most challenging areas of modern human settlement. Archaeological evidence dates the earliest settlement on the plateau to the Late Paleolithic, while previous genetic studies have traced the colonization event(s) to no earlier than the Neolithic. To explore whether the genetic continuity...

2001
Ola Olsson

The article analyzes the economic reasons behind the rise of Neolithic agriculture some 10,000 years ago in consideration of evidence that agriculture was not associated with increasing standards of living. On the basis of archeological and anthropological literature, the article presents a modelling framework that allows for four broad explanations to the agricultural transition; (i) environme...

2015
Miguel A. Faria

The perplexing mystery of why so many trephined skulls from the Neolithic period have been uncovered all over the world representing attempts at primitive cranial surgery is discussed. More than 1500 trephined skulls have been uncovered throughout the world, from Europe and Scandinavia to North America, from Russia and China to South America (particularly in Peru). Most reported series show tha...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Amy Bogaard Rebecca Fraser Tim H E Heaton Michael Wallace Petra Vaiglova Michael Charles Glynis Jones Richard P Evershed Amy K Styring Niels H Andersen Rose-Marie Arbogast László Bartosiewicz Armelle Gardeisen Marie Kanstrup Ursula Maier Elena Marinova Lazar Ninov Marguerita Schäfer Elisabeth Stephan

The spread of farming from western Asia to Europe had profound long-term social and ecological impacts, but identification of the specific nature of Neolithic land management practices and the dietary contribution of early crops has been problematic. Here, we present previously undescribed stable isotope determinations of charred cereals and pulses from 13 Neolithic sites across Europe (dating ...

2011

Africa’s past is a profound mix of enchanting history, variegated cultures, mosaic peoples whose ways of life are as varied as the disparate peoples who inhabit the continent. From the civilization of the Neolithic Age, an age when the area now occupied by the Sahara Desert was noted as fertile land that produced the Neolithic people whose discovery and work with iron gave birth to the Iron Age...

2018
Peter Revesz

The extraction of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from ancient human population samples provides important data for the reconstruction of population influences, spread and evolution from the Neolithic to the present. This paper presents a mtDNA-based similarity measure between pairs of human populations and a computational model for the evolution of human populations. In a computational experiment, t...

2017
Luis M. Martínez-Torres

Fifty-two Neolithic tombs (dolmens) were grouped into megalithic stations that are mostly located on lithotecto from which the building rocks were removed. In six dolmens, there were no clues found to explain the presence of allochthonous stones, except perhaps in one of them, where rocks were selected to cause colour contrast. The morphology of the slabs, of chambers and corridors, showed no e...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Houyuan Lu Jianping Zhang Kam-biu Liu Naiqin Wu Yumei Li Kunshu Zhou Maolin Ye Tianyu Zhang Haijiang Zhang Xiaoyan Yang Licheng Shen Deke Xu Quan Li

The origin of millet from Neolithic China has generally been accepted, but it remains unknown whether common millet (Panicum miliaceum) or foxtail millet (Setaria italica) was the first species domesticated. Nor do we know the timing of their domestication and their routes of dispersal. Here, we report the discovery of husk phytoliths and biomolecular components identifiable solely as common mi...

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