Results 171 to 180 of about 1,827 (206)
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Gravettian tear-drop-shaped beads

L'Anthropologie, 2018
Abstract The two regions southwestern Germany and southwestern France have yielded Gravettian personal ornaments in form of tear-drop-shaped beads. We present updated numbers of these artefacts, because during the recent excavations since 2002 in Hohle Fels cave near the city of Ulm, Southwest Germany, additional beads were found.
Carole Vercoutère, Sibylle Wolf
openaire   +1 more source

New technologies for plant food processing in the Gravettian

Quaternary International, 2015
Abstract “Plant Resources in the Palaeolithic” is a research project focused on the technologies for plant food processing as documented by use-wear traces and plant residue on grinding tools found in European sites. Many researchers have been involved in the project, which encompasses the fields of archaeology, botany and food processing ...
Revedin, Anna   +8 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Which Gravettians at Spy?

2013
International ...
Pesesse, Damien, Flas, Damien
openaire   +1 more source

Assessing the Gravettian occupation floor at Krems-Wachtberg

L'Anthropologie, 2021
L'Anthropologie - Sous presse. Epreuves corrigees par l'auteur.
openaire   +1 more source

Gravettian hunting and exploitation of bears in Central Europe

Quaternary International, 2015
Abstract Evidence of hunting and exploitation of cave bears (Ursus spelaeus, sensu lato) are recently documented in western and eastern sites of its former European distribution in Middle and Upper Palaeolithic contexts. Human hunting and exploitation has always been accepted for brown bears (Ursus arctos) but not for cave bears.
Piotr Wojtal   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The industrial variability of the eastern Gravettian assemblages of Ukraine

2021
Quartär – Internationales Jahrbuch zur Erforschung des Eiszeitalters und der Steinzeit, Bd. 56 (2009): Quartär.
openaire   +1 more source

The 3rd Conference World of Gravettian Hunters

Quaternary International, 2021
György Lengyel   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Gravettian lithics assemblages from Lubná (Bohemia)

Quaternary International, 2016
Abstract The first excavated Palaeolithic site of Bohemia was Lubna, where J. Kusta in 1890 excavated station I. At least seven other sites (Lubna II to VIII) were discovered in its vicinity over time, making the Lubna area the richest site cluster in Bohemia.
openaire   +1 more source

Neandertal and Gravettian diets: continuum or revolution?

2022
Recently, a number of stones from Gravettian contexts (ca 31 000 to 23 000 years BP) at archaeological sites have been recognized as grinding stones bearing traces of starch. This led to a proposal that the Gravettian people used wild grain flour, suggesting a change in diet (carbohydrate consumption) compared to earlier populations (Neandertals).
openaire  

The Lithic Issues of the Gravettian

Quaternary International, 2016
György Lengyel, Jarosław Wilczyński
openaire   +1 more source

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