نتایج جستجو برای: upper paleolithic transition

تعداد نتایج: 463176  

2005
TIMOTHY D. WEAVER KAREN STEUDEL-NUMBERS

European Neandertals and their Upper Paleolithic modern human successors differ substantially in various proportions of their bodies. As compared to Neandertals, Upper Paleolithic Europeans tend to have longer limbs, both absolutely and relative to estimated skeletal trunk height; narrower bi-iliac breadths, both absolutely and relative to femur length; and higher brachial and crural indices.1–...

Journal: :Journal of human evolution 2008
Nicholas J Conard Michael Bolus

Many lines of evidence point to the period between roughly 40 and 30 ka BP as the period in which modern humans arrived in Europe and displaced the indigenous Neandertal populations. At the same time, many innovations associated with the Upper Paleolithic--including new stone and organic technologies, use of personal ornaments, figurative art, and musical instruments--are first documented in th...

Journal: :Journal of human evolution 2008
Wil Roebroeks

The Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition is a key period of change in the prehistory of the Old World and one of the most studied issues in paleoanthropology, as the nature of the transition(s) is still, after at least a century of archaeological research, largely unknown. Many of the issues at stake in the transition relate to the problem of building a reliable chronology for this period, wh...

2005
Erik Trinkaus Grotte de Fontanet

Archeological evidence suggests that footwear was in use by at least the middle Upper Paleolithic (Gravettian) in portions of Europe, but the frequency of use and the mechanical protection provided are unclear from these data. A comparative biomechanical analysis of the proximal pedal phalanges of western Eurasian Middle Paleolithic and middle Upper Paleolithic humans, in the context of those o...

Journal: :Collegium antropologicum 2004
Francesca Alhaique Michelangelo Bisconti Elisabetta Castiglioni Cristina Cilli Leone Fasani Giacomo Giacobini Renata Grifoni Antonio Guerreschi Andrea Iacopini Giancarla Malerba Carlo Peretto Alexandra Recchi Antonio Rocci Ris Annamaria Ronchitelli Mauro Rottoli Ursula Thun Hohenstein Carlo Tozzi Paola Visentini Barbara Wilkens

Several faunal assemblages excavated in deposits of different antiquity (from Lower Paleolithic to Bronze Age), located in Northern, Central and Southern Italy, were studied from the archeozoological and taphonomic point of view. Data obtained by different Authors allow reconstruction of subsistence strategies adopted by prehistoric humans in these areas and through time, in particular as far a...

2016
Can Wang Houyuan Lu Jianping Zhang Keyang He Xiujia Huan Michael D. Petraglia

Detailed studies of the long-term development of plant use strategies indicate that plant subsistence patterns have noticeably changed since the Upper Paleolithic, when humans underwent a transitional process from foraging to agriculture. This transition was best recorded in west Asia; however, information about how plant subsistence changed during this transition remains limited in China. This...

2011
Sandrine Prat Stéphane C. Péan Laurent Crépin Dorothée G. Drucker Simon J. Puaud Hélène Valladas Martina Lázničková-Galetová Johannes van der Plicht Alexander Yanevich

BACKGROUND Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) are known to have spread across Europe during the period coinciding with the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition. Whereas their dispersal into Western Europe is relatively well established, evidence of an early settlement of Eastern Europe by modern humans are comparatively scarce. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDING Based on a multidisciplinary appro...

Journal: :American journal of physical anthropology 2006
Rachel Caspari Sang-Hee Lee

Increased longevity, expressed as the number of individuals surviving to older adulthood, represents a key way that Upper Paleolithic Europeans differ from earlier European (Neandertal) populations. Here, we address whether longevity increased as a result of cultural/adaptive change in Upper Paleolithic Europe, or whether it was introduced to Europe as a part of modern human biology. We compare...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010
Priscilla Bayle Roberto Macchiarelli Erik Trinkaus Cidália Duarte Arnaud Mazurier João Zilhão

Neandertals differ from recent and terminal Pleistocene human populations in their patterns of dental development, endostructural (internal structure) organization, and relative tissue proportions. Although significant changes in craniofacial and postcranial morphology have been found between the Middle Paleolithic and earlier Upper Paleolithic modern humans of western Eurasia and the terminal ...

2006
Steven L. Kuhn Mary C. Stiner

Recent hunter-gatherers display much uniformity in the division of labor along the lines of gender and age. The complementary economic roles for men and women typical of ethnographically documented hunter-gatherers did not appear in Eurasia until the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic. The rich archaeological record of Middle Paleolithic cultures in Eurasia suggests that earlier hominins pursue...

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