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Azilian pebbles: an unsolved mystery
Endeavour, 1984Abstract The end of the Ice Age (c. 9–8000 BC) in the French Pyrenees and other European areas is characterised by, among other things, the production of enigmatically decorated pebbles. Many theories concerning their function have been put forward. A recent analysis indicates that the decoration is non-random, and may represent some sort of notation.
Paul G Bahn, Claude Couraud
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Analysis of Dental Cementum Rings as an Approach to Azilian Hunting Strategies
Environmental Archaeology, 1998Abstract Perfected by biologists, the analysis of dental cementum rings allows us to know the precise age of the animals studied as well as their season of death. Cementum deposits are layers of various density formed regularly during the animal's life.
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To each its own pace : A divergence in the evolution of technical and symbolic systems at the beginning of the Azilian?
Naudinot, Nicolas +7 more
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Journal of Quaternary Science, 2000
An excavation primarily intended to investigate the Bronze Age deposits at Hautrive-Champreveyres, Neuchâtel, Switzerland, encountered beneath the Bronze Age levels a sequence of Late-glacial sediments that were deposited between about 13000 yr BP and 11800 yr BP.
G Russell Coope, Scott A Elias
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An excavation primarily intended to investigate the Bronze Age deposits at Hautrive-Champreveyres, Neuchâtel, Switzerland, encountered beneath the Bronze Age levels a sequence of Late-glacial sediments that were deposited between about 13000 yr BP and 11800 yr BP.
G Russell Coope, Scott A Elias
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The Azilian man from Los Azules Cave I (Cangas de Onis, Oviedo, Spain)
Human Evolution, 1986The author analyzes in this study the human skeleton found in the Azilian Grave of Los Azules Cave I (Asturias, NW of Spain), dated by C-14 between 7480 and 7590 B. C. It was diagnosed as an adult male, having a general strong robustness and high stature, as well as a congenital fusion of the right talus bones and, probably, bilateral claw foot.
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The emergence of Azilian on the edge of the world: technical systems and mobility in the northwest of ...
Marchand, Grégor, Naudinot, Nicolas
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Azilian Pebbles in British Collections: a Re-examination
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1982The name ‘Azilian’ is firmly linked to that of Edward Piette, the principal excavator of the site on the left bank of the river Arize in the tunnel-cave of the Mas d'Azil (Ariège), in the French Pyrenees (see Bahn 1979). From 1887 onward this site yielded hundreds of painted and engraved pebbles (Piette 1896, 1903).
Claude Couraud, Paul G. Bahn
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