Results 71 to 80 of about 819 (196)
The last Lateglacial and Early Holocene societies in France (abridged version)
Since the middle of the 1980s, a lot of research has focused on the end of the Upper Palaeolithic in France. This article presents an overview of these thirty years of research, organized around four main geographic units which structure our knowledge of
Nicolas Naudinot +4 more
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Agia Marina and Peristereònas: Two New Epipalaeolithic Sites on the Island of Lemnos (Greece) [PDF]
The surveys carried out along the coasts of the Island of Lemnos (Greece) have led to the discovery of new Late Epipalaeolithic sites at Agia Marina and Peristereònas. Peristereònas yielded a knapped stone assemblage which is strictly comparable with
Paolo Biagi +4 more
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Les dernières sociétés du Tardiglaciaire et des tout débuts de l’Holocène en France
Since the middle of the 1980s, a lot of research has focused on the end of the Upper Palaeolithic in France. This article presents an overview of these thirty years of research, organized around four main geographic units which structure our knowledge of
Nicolas Naudinot +4 more
doaj +1 more source
The Palaeolithic and Epipalaeolithic of the Nile Valley and the deserts
Köhler E. Christiana. The Palaeolithic and Epipalaeolithic of the Nile Valley and the deserts. In: Archéo-Nil. Revue de la société pour l'étude des cultures prépharaoniques de la vallée du Nil, n°21, 2011.
Köhler, E. Christiana
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[Research Article] Fishing gear is not frequently found in archaeological sites in the southern Levant. Bone hooks were found as early as the later Epipalaeolithic period (mainly in Natufian culture sites) and continue to appear in small numbers until ...
Danny Rosenberg +2 more
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Identifying endocarp remains and exploring their use at Epipalaeolithic Öküzini in southwest Anatolia, Turkey [PDF]
Excavation of the Epipalaeolithic levels of the cave site Öküzini in southwest Anatolia produced many "nutshell” remains, mainly endocarp fragments belonging either to Prunus or Amygdalus.
Jacomet, Stefanie, Martinoli, Danièle
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The Refining of Tools. The Epipalaeolithic Period (c 23,000 - 11,600 years ago)
The Epipalaeolithic (EP) period (ca. 23,000 - 11,600 years ago) in Jordan documents a remarkable series of transitions from mobile hunter-gatherers in the Upper Palaeolithic to sedentary food-producing villagers in the Neolithic.
Lisa A. Maher, Maher, Lisa A.
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The reason and significance of variation in material culture is one of the most fundamental debates in archaeological studies. These debates factor strongly into Levantine Epipalaeolithic research, where the morphological variability of microlithic tools
Macdonald, Danielle
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Late Palaeolithic and Epipalaeolithic Rock Art in Egypt: Qurta and El-Hosh
Huyge Dirk. Late Palaeolithic and Epipalaeolithic Rock Art in Egypt: Qurta and El-Hosh. In: Archéo-Nil. Revue de la société pour l'étude des cultures prépharaoniques de la vallée du Nil, n°19, 2009.
Huyge, Dirk
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KÖRTIKTEPE IN THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEOLITHIC IN UPPER MESOPOTAMIA
The transition from Late Epipalaeolithic to early Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) (PPNA) was a gradual process that took a time span of over two millennia.
Özkaya, Vecihi, Sıddıq, Abu Bakar
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