Results 181 to 190 of about 15,620 (224)

Genetic transitions in the Neolithic and Bronze Age at Mas d'en Boixos (Catalonia, Spain). [PDF]

open access: yesiScience
Roca-Rada X   +12 more
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Beyond the Palaeolithic: Figurative final Palaeolithic art in Mediterranean Iberia

Quaternary International, 2020
Abstract This paper is part of a broad special issue exploring the Cultures of the Pleistocene-Holocene transition in Western Europe. In this context our aim is to offer a state of the art review of the figurative Palaeolithic art spanning the period between 15000 and 11500 cal BP (12500-10000 BP) in the Mediterranean Iberia.
Domingo, Inés, Roman, Dídac
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Investigation of a Final Palaeolithic Site at Rookery Farm, Great Wilbraham, Cambridgeshire

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 2009
This paper presents the results of excavations at an Upper Palaeolithic site that was discovered at Rookery Farm, Great Wilbraham, Cambridgeshire in 2002. Diagnostic lithic material – three penknife points – indicates that the site was probably occupied between 12,000 and 11,000 BP, a time of deteriorating climatic conditions.
Conneller, Chantal   +3 more
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A Final Upper Palaeolithic Site at La Sagesse Convent, Romsey, Hampshire

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 2007
Excavations at La Sagesse Convent, Romsey, uncovered a Final Upper Palaeolithic flint assemblage representing an open-air, short-term camp. The site is in the Test Valley on a low gravel terrace at the edge of the river system. Two scatters were found.
Chantal Conneller   +4 more
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Hafting with beeswax in the Final Palaeolithic: a barbed point from Bergkamen

Antiquity, 2017
Abstract
Michael Baales   +2 more
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A new ornamented artefact from Poland: final palaeolithic symbolism from an environmental perspective

Journal of Archaeological Science, 2011
Abstract An ornamented artefact made of antler, found in the environs of Świdwin (Pomerania, NW Poland), was subject to structural and environmental analysis. Radiocarbon dating (10 700 ± 60 BP or 10 910–10 680 cal. BC) places it in the Final Palaeolithic, at the end of Weichselian (boundary of the Allerod and Younger Dryas).
Tomasz Płonka   +5 more
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Final Palaeolithic Cultures and the Middle Stone Age

1970
The Middle Stone Age or Mesolithic Period has lost something of the meaning originally attributed to it. With the close of the Wiurm glaciation, the west European area which dominated much of the last chapter loses its importance for the moment, and the centre of interest shifts to south-west Asia, where the human groups and the special circumstances ...
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