DOI:10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.11.012 - Corpus ID: 73486830
New data for the Early Upper Paleolithic of Kostenki (Russia).
@article{Dinnis2019NewDF, title={New data for the Early Upper Paleolithic of Kostenki (Russia).}, author={Rob Dinnis and Alexander A. Bessudnov and Natasha A. Reynolds and Thibaut Devi{\`e}se and Abi Pate and Mikhail V. Sablin and Andrei Sinitsyn and Thomas F.G. Higham}, journal={Journal of human evolution}, year={2019}, volume={127}, pages={ 21-40 }, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:73486830} }
- R. Dinnis, A. Bessudnov, T. Higham
- Published in Journal of Human Evolution 1 February 2019
- History
41 Citations
THE TEMPO OF CULTURAL CHANGE IN THE KOSTENKI UPPER PALEOLITHIC: FURTHER INSIGHTS
- R. DinnisA. Bessudnov K. Douka
- History
- 2021
The Kostenki-Borshchevo site complex (Voronezh region, Russia) serves as the foundation of Eastern Europe’s Upper Paleolithic chronocultural framework. Here we present new radiocarbon dates for three…
Reevaluating the timing of Neanderthal disappearance in Northwest Europe
- T. DevièseG. Abrams T. Higham
- History
- 2021
It is demonstrated here that previous dates produced on Neanderthal specimens from Spy were inaccurately young by up to 10,000 y due to the presence of unremoved contamination, and chronometric models regarding the appearance or disappearance of animal or hominin groups should be based only on radiocarbon dates obtained using robust pretreatment methods.
The Beginning of the Early Upper Paleolithic in Poland
Research on the timing of Homo sapiens dispersals in Central Europe is pivotal for understanding the behavioral trajectories of human adaptation to low biomass environments and cold climates.…
The early Aurignacian dispersal of modern humans into westernmost Eurasia
- Jonathan A. HawsJonathan A. Haws Brandon Zinsious
- History
- 2020
The archaeological and radiocarbon data provide definitive evidence that modern humans were in western Iberia at a time when, if present at all, Neanderthal populations would have been extremely sparse, and support a very rapid, unimpeded dispersal of modern humans across western Eurasia.
Eastern Europe’s “Transitional Industry”?: Deconstructing the Early Streletskian
- R. DinnisA. Bessudnov T. Higham
- History
- 2021
The Streletskian is central to understanding the onset of the Upper Palaeolithic on the East European Plain. Early Streletskian assemblages are frequently seen as marking the Neanderthal-anatomically…
A Complex of Stratifi ed Upper Paleolithic Sites in the Foothills of the Northern Tien Shan: General Data and Research Perspectives
- D. OzherelyevT. B. Mamirov
- History, GeographyArchaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of…
- 2023
This article examines the key cultural trends and events in the evolution of the Upper Paleolithic in the foothills of the Northern Tien Shan (Zailisky Alatau, Kazakhstan). It outlines the history of…
Compound-specific radiocarbon dating and mitochondrial DNA analysis of the Pleistocene hominin from Salkhit Mongolia
- T. DevièseDiyendo Massilani T. Higham
- Biology, History
- 2019
The Salkhit skull from Mongolia is date to approximately 34–35 thousand years ago and its mitochondrial genome is reconstructed, finding that it falls within modern human haplogroup N found across Eurasia.
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193 References
Revised age of late Neanderthal occupation and the end of the Middle Paleolithic in the northern Caucasus
It is indicated at a high level of probability that Neanderthals did not survive at Mezmaiskaya Cave after 39 ka cal BP ("calendrical" age in kiloannum before present, based on IntCal09 calibration curve).
Direct dating of Neanderthal remains from the site of Vindija Cave and implications for the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition
- T. DevièseI. Karavanić T. Higham
- History
- 2017
Significance Radiocarbon dating of Neanderthal remains recovered from Vindija Cave (Croatia) initially revealed surprisingly recent results: 28,000–29,000 B.P. This implied the remains could…
The Chronological Factor in Understanding the Middle and Upper Paleolithic of Eurasia
For more than half a century, prehistorians have grappled with radiocarbon-based chronologies that are often contradictory and imprecise. Several key debates in the Paleolithic have their roots, at…
Late pleistocene paleosol sequences as an instrument for the local paleographic reconstruction of the Kostenki 14 key section (Voronezh oblast) as an example
- S. SedovO. Khokhlova A. A. Kazdym
- Geology, Environmental Science
- 2010
A sequence of five paleosol units (with seven individual paleosol profiles) buried in the Late Pleistocene (20–40 ka) deposits was studied at the Kostenki 14 (K14) key section in Voronezh oblast with…
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