[1]
Advasio, J.M. and Pedler, D.R. 1997. Monte Verde and the antiquity of humankind in the Americas. Antiquity. 71, 273 (1997), 573–580.
[2]
Alain Testart, Richard G. Forbis, Brian Hayden, Tim Ingold, Stephen M. Perlman, David L. Pokotylo, Peter Rowley-Conwy and David E. Stuart The Significance of Food Storage Among Hunter-Gatherers: Residence Patterns, Population Densities, and Social Inequalities [and Comments and Reply]. Current Anthropology. 23, 5, 523–537.
[3]
Alves, I. et al. 2012. Genomic Data Reveal a Complex Making of Humans. PLoS Genetics. 8, 7 (Jul. 2012). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002837.
[4]
Ambrose, S.H. 1998. Chronology of the Later Stone Age and Food Production in East Africa. Journal of Archaeological Science. 25, 4 (Apr. 1998), 377–392. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.1997.0277.
[5]
Ames, K.M. 2003. The Northwest Coast. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 12, 1 (Feb. 2003), 19–33. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.10102.
[6]
Andersen, S.H. 1995. Coastal adaptation and marine exploitation in Late Mesolithic Denmark. Man and sea in the Mesolithic: coastal settlement above and below present sea level. Oxbow Monographs. 41–66.
[7]
Andrefsky, William 2005. Lithics: macroscopic approaches to analysis. Cambridge University Press.
[8]
Arnold, J.E. 1996. The archaeology of complex hunter-gatherers. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 3, 1 (Mar. 1996), 77–126. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02228931.
[9]
Audouze, F. and Enloe, J. 1991. Subsistence strategies and economy in the Magdalenian of the Paris Basin, France. The Late glacial in north-west Europe: human adaptation and environmental change at the end of the Pleistocene. Council for British Archaeology. 63–71.
[10]
Bahn, Paul G. and Vertut, Jean 1997. Journey through the Ice Age. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
[11]
Balme, J. 2013. Of boats and string: The maritime colonisation of Australia. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 68–75. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.02.029.
[12]
Barham, Lawrence and Mitchell, Peter 2008. The first Africans: African archaeology from the earliest toolmakers to most recent foragers. Cambridge University Press.
[13]
Barker, G. et al. 2007. The ‘human revolution’ in lowland tropical Southeast Asia: the antiquity and behavior of anatomically modern humans at Niah Cave (Sarawak, Borneo). Journal of Human Evolution. 52, 3 (Mar. 2007), 243–261. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.08.011.
[14]
Bar-Oz, Guy 2004. Epipaleolithic subsistence strategies in the Levant: a zooarchaeological perspective. Brill Academic.
[15]
Barton, C. Michael1Clark, G. A.1Cohen, Allison E.1Gowlett, John A. J. Art as information: Explaining Upper Paleolithic art in western Europe. Art as information: Explaining Upper Paleolithic art in western Europe. 26, 2, 185–207.
[16]
Bar-Yosef Mayer, D.E. et al. 2009. Shells and ochre in Middle Paleolithic Qafzeh Cave, Israel: indications for modern behavior. Journal of Human Evolution. 56, 3 (Mar. 2009), 307–314. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2008.10.005.
[17]
Bar-Yosef, O. 1998. On the Nature of Transitions: the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic and the Neolithic Revolution. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 8, 02 (Oct. 1998). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300001815.
[18]
Bar-Yosef, O. 1998. On the Nature of Transitions: the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic and the Neolithic Revolution. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 8, 02 (Oct. 1998). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300001815.
[19]
Bar-Yosef, O. 2000. The Middle and Early Upper Paleolithic in Southwest Asia and neighbouring regions. The geography of Neandertals and modern humans in Europe and the Greater Mediterranean. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University. 107–156.
[20]
Bar-Yosef, O. 1998. The Natufian culture in the Levant, threshold to the origins of agriculture. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 6, 5 (1998), 159–177. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1998)6:5<159::AID-EVAN4>3.0.CO;2-7.
[21]
Bar-Yosef, Ofer et al. 2006. Towards a definition of the Aurignacian: proceedings of the symposium held in Lisbon, Portugal, June 25-30. 2002. Instituto Português de Arqueologia.
[22]
Belfer-Cohen, A. 1995. Rethinking social stratification in the Natufian culture: the evidence from burials. The archaeology of death in the ancient Near East. Oxbow Books. 9–16.
[23]
Bell, Martin and Walker, M. J. C. 2004. Late Quaternary environmental change: physical and human perspectives. Pearson.
[24]
Bellwood, Peter 1997. Prehistory of the Indo-Malaysian Archipelago. University of Hawai’i Press.
[25]
Benazzi, S. et al. 2011. Early dispersal of modern humans in Europe and implications for Neanderthal behaviour. Nature. 479, 7374 (Nov. 2011), 525–528. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10617.
[26]
Binford, Lewis Roberts 2001. Constructing frames of reference: an analytical method for archaeological theory building using hunter-gatherer and environmental data sets. University of California Press.
[27]
Binford, Lewis Roberts 2002. In pursuit of the past: decoding the archaeological record : with a new afterword. University of California Press.
[28]
Binford, Lewis Roberts 1978. Nunamiut ethnoarchaeology. Academic Press.
[29]
Bolus, M. and Conard, N.J. 2001. The late Middle Paleolithic and earliest Upper Paleolithic in Central Europe and their relevance for the Out of Africa hypothesis. Quaternary International. 75, 1 (Jan. 2001), 29–40. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S1040-6182(00)00075-6.
[30]
Bowler, J.M. et al. 2003. New ages for human occupation and climatic change at Lake Mungo, Australia. Nature. 421, 6925 (Feb. 2003), 837–840. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01383.
[31]
Brian Boyd On ‘Sedentism’ in the Later Epipalaeolithic (Natufian) Levant. World Archaeology. 38, 2, 164–178.
[32]
Brian F. Byrd Reassessing the Emergence of Village Life in the Near East. Journal of Archaeological Research. 13, 3, 231–290.
[33]
Brown, K.S. et al. 2012. An early and enduring advanced technology originating 71,000 years ago in South Africa. Nature. 491, 7425 (Nov. 2012), 590–593. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11660.
[34]
Byrd, B.F. and Monahan, C.M. 1995. Death, Mortuary Ritual, and Natufian Social Structure. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 14, 3 (Sep. 1995), 251–287. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jaar.1995.1014.
[35]
C. C. Swisher III, W. J. Rink, S. C. Antón, H. P. Schwarcz, G. H. Curtis, A. Suprijo and Widiasmoro 13AD. Latest Homo erectus of Java: Potential Contemporaneity with Homo sapiens in Southeast Asia. Science. 274, 5294 (13AD), 1870–1874.
[36]
C. N. Johnson 7AD. Determinants of Loss of Mammal Species during the Late Quaternary ‘Megafauna’ Extinctions: Life History and Ecology, but Not Body Size. Proceedings: Biological Sciences. 269, 1506 (7AD), 2221–2227.
[37]
Cain, C.R. 2006. Implications of the Marked Artifacts of the Middle Stone Age of Africa. Current Anthropology. 47, 4 (Aug. 2006), 675–681. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/506287.
[38]
Cavalli-Sforza, L.L. and Feldman, M.W. 2003. The application of molecular genetic approaches to the study of human evolution. Nature Genetics. 33, 3s (Mar. 2003), 266–275. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/ng1113.
[39]
Chippindale, Christopher and Taçon, Paul S. C. 1998. The archaeology of rock-art. Cambridge University Press.
[40]
Clottes, J. 1993. Paint Analyses from Several Magdalenian Caves in the Ariège Region of France. Journal of Archaeological Science. 20, 2 (Mar. 1993), 223–235. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.1993.1015.
[41]
Clottes, J. 1999. Twenty thousand years of Palaeolithic cave art in southern France. World prehistory: studies in memory of Grahame Clark. Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. 161–174.
[42]
Clottes, Jean 2003. Return to Chauvet Cave: excavating the birthplace of art : the first full report. Thames & Hudson.
[43]
Conard, Nicholas John 2006. When Neanderthals and modern humans met. Kerns.
[44]
Conkey, Margaret Wright et al. 1997. Beyond art: Pleistocene image and symbol. California Academy of Sciences.
[45]
Conneller, Chantal and Warren, Graeme 2006. Mesolithic Britain and Ireland: new approaches. Tempus.
[46]
Conroy, Glenn C. and Pontzer, Herman 2012. Reconstructing human origins: a modern synthesis. W.W. Norton & Co.
[47]
Daly, R.H. and Lee, R.B. 1999. The Cambridge encyclopedia of hunters and gatherers. Cambridge University Press.
[48]
David, Bruno 2002. Landscapes, rock-art and the dreaming: an achaeology of preunderstanding. Leicester University Press.
[49]
David, Bruno 2002. Landscapes, rock-art and the dreaming: an achaeology of preunderstanding. Leicester University Press.
[50]
Deacon, H.J. and Wurz, S. 2001. Middle Pleistocene populations of southern Africa and the emergence of modern behaviour. Human roots: Africa and Asia in the Middle Pleistocene. Western Academic & Specialist Press for the Centre for Human Evolutionary Research at the University of Bristol. 55–64.
[51]
Debénath, André and Dibble, Harold Lewis 1993. Handbook of paleolithic typology. University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.
[52]
Delage, Christophe 2004. The last hunter-gatherers in the Near East. John and Erica Hedges Ltd.
[53]
Demars, Pierre-Yves and Laurent, Pierre 1992. Types d’outils lithiques du paléolithique supérieur en Europe. Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
[54]
D’Errico, F. 2003. The invisible frontier. A multiple species model for the origin of behavioral modernity. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 12, 4 (Aug. 2003), 188–202. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.10113.
[55]
Dillehay, T.D. 1999. The late Pleistocene cultures of South America. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 7, 6 (1999), 206–216. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1999)7:6<206::AID-EVAN5>3.0.CO;2-G.
[56]
Dillehay, Tom D. 2000. The settlement of the Americas: a new prehistory. Basic Books.
[57]
Dixon, E.J. 2013. Late Pleistocene colonization of North America from Northeast Asia: New insights from large-scale paleogeographic reconstructions. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 57–67. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.02.027.
[58]
Donald K. Grayson Late Pleistocene Mammalian Extinctions in North America: Taxonomy, Chronology, and Explanations. Journal of World Prehistory. 5, 3, 193–231.
[59]
Douka, K. et al. 2013. Chronology of Ksar Akil (Lebanon) and Implications for the Colonization of Europe by Anatomically Modern Humans. PLoS ONE. 8, 9 (Sep. 2013). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072931.
[60]
Edwards, P.C. 1989. Problems of recognizing earliest sedentism: the Natufian example. Journal of Mediterranean archaeology. 2, (1989), 5–48.
[61]
Endicott, P. et al. 2009. Evaluating the mitochondrial timescale of human evolution. Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 24, 9 (Sep. 2009), 515–521. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2009.04.006.
[62]
Erlandson, J.M. et al. 2011. Paleoindian Seafaring, Maritime Technologies, and Coastal Foraging on California’s Channel Islands. Science. 331, 6021 (Mar. 2011), 1181–1185. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1201477.
[63]
d’Errico, F. 2003. Archaeological Evidence for the Emergence of Language, Symbolism, and Music–An Alternative Multidisciplinary Perspectiv. Journal of World Prehistory. 17, 1 (2003), 1–70. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1023980201043.
[64]
d’Errico, F. et al. 1998. Neanderthal Acculturation in Western Europe? A Critical Review of the Evidence and Its Interpretation. Current Anthropology. 39, S1 (Jun. 1998), S1–S44. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/204689.
[65]
Eshleman, J.A. et al. 2003. Mitochondrial DNA studies of Native Americans: Conceptions and misconceptions of the population prehistory of the Americas. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 12, 1 (Feb. 2003), 7–18. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.10048.
[66]
Faith, J.T. 2008. Eland, buffalo, and wild pigs: were Middle Stone Age humans ineffective hunters? Journal of Human Evolution. 55, 1 (Jul. 2008), 24–36. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2007.11.005.
[67]
Field, J. et al. 2001. A large area archaeological excavation at Cuddie Springs. Antiquity. 75, 290 (2001), 696–702.
[68]
Field, J. et al. 2013. Looking for the archaeological signature in Australian Megafaunal extinctions. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 76–88. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.013.
[69]
Finlayson, C. and et al 2012. Birds of a feather: Neanderthal exploitation of raptors and corvids. PLoS ONE. 7, 9 (2012), e45927–e45927.
[70]
Firestone, R.B. et al. 2007. Evidence for an extraterrestrial impact 12,900 years ago that contributed to the megafaunal extinctions and the Younger Dryas cooling. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104, 41 (Oct. 2007), 16016–16021. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0706977104.
[71]
Flood, Josephine 1999. Archaeology of the dreamtime: the story of prehistoric Australia and its people. Angus & Robertson.
[72]
Foley, R. and Lahr, M.M. 1997. Mode 3 Technologies and the Evolution of Modern Humans. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 7, 01 (Apr. 1997). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300001451.
[73]
Formicola, V. 2007. From the Sunghir Children to the Romito Dwarf: Aspects of the Upper Paleolithic Funerary Landscape. Current Anthropology. 48, 3 (Jun. 2007), 446–453. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/517592.
[74]
Francesco d’Errico, Christopher Henshilwood, Graeme Lawson, Marian Vanhaeren, Anne-Marie Tillier, Marie Soressi, Frédérique Bresson, Bruno Maureille, April Nowell, Joseba Lakarra, Lucinda Backwell and Michèle Julien Archaeological Evidence for the Emergence of Language, Symbolism, and Music - An Alternative Multidisciplinary Perspective. Journal of World Prehistory. 17, 1, 1–70.
[75]
Gamble, C. et al. 2005. The Archaeological and Genetic Foundations of the European Population during the Late Glacial: Implications for. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 15, 02 (Oct. 2005). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774305000107.
[76]
Gamble, C. 2007. The Human Revolution. Origins and Revolutions. Cambridge University Press. 33–58.
[77]
Gamble, Clive 1999. The palaeolithic societies of Europe. Cambridge University Press.
[78]
Gamble, Clive and Boismier, W. A. 1991. Ethnoarchaeological aproaches to mobile campsites: hunter-gatherer and pastoralist case studies. International Monographs in Prehistory.
[79]
Gathorne-Hardy, F.J. and Harcourt-Smith, W.E.H. 2003. The super-eruption of Toba, did it cause a human bottleneck? Journal of Human Evolution. 45, 3 (Sep. 2003), 227–230. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0047-2484(03)00105-2.
[80]
Giacobini, G. 2007. Richness and Diversity of Burial Rituals in the Upper Paleolithic. Diogenes. 54, 2 (May 2007), 19–39. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0392192107077649.
[81]
Gill, J.L. et al. 2009. Pleistocene Megafaunal Collapse, Novel Plant Communities, and Enhanced Fire Regimes in North America. Science. 326, 5956 (Nov. 2009), 1100–1103. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1179504.
[82]
Goebel, T. 1999. Pleistocene human colonization of Siberia and peopling of the Americas: An ecological approach. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 8, 6 (1999), 208–227. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1999)8:6<208::AID-EVAN2>3.0.CO;2-M.
[83]
Gordon, Bryan H. C. 1988. Of men and reindeer herds in French Magdalenian prehistory. B.A.R.
[84]
Goring-Morris, A. Nigel and Belfer-Cohen, Anna 2003. More than meets the eye: studies on upper Palaeolithic diversity in the Near East. Oxbow.
[85]
Goring-Morris, N. and Belfer-Cohen, A. 2003. Structures and dwellings in the Upper and Epi-Palaeolithic (ca 42 - 10 k BP) Levant. Profane and symbolic uses. Perceived landscapes and built environments: the cultural geography of Late Paleolithic Eurasia. Archaeopress. 65–81.
[86]
Gould, Richard, A. 1980. Living archaeology. Cambridge University Press.
[87]
Grayson, D.K. and Delpech, F. 2002. Specialized Early Upper Palaeolithic Hunters in Southwestern France? Journal of Archaeological Science. 29, 12 (Dec. 2002), 1439–1449. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.2002.0806.
[88]
Grayson, D.K. and Meltzer, D.J. 2003. A requiem for North American overkill. Journal of Archaeological Science. 30, 5 (May 2003), 585–593. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0305-4403(02)00205-4.
[89]
Green, R.E. et al. 2010. A Draft Sequence of the Neandertal Genome. Science. 328, 5979 (May 2010), 710–722. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1188021.
[90]
Gron, O. 2003. Mesolithic dwelling places in south Scandinavia: their definition and social interpretation. Antiquity. 77, 298 (2003), 685–708.
[91]
Guidon, N. and et al. 1996. Nature and age of the deposits in Pedra Furada, Brazil. Antiquity. 70, 268 (1996), 408–421.
[92]
Guthrie, R. Dale 2005. The nature of Paleolithic art. University of Chicago Press.
[93]
Gvozdover, Mariana 1995. Art of the mammoth hunters: the finds from Avdeevo. Oxbow Books.
[94]
H. Martin Wobst The Archaeo-Ethnology of Hunter-Gatherers or the Tyranny of the Ethnographic Record in Archaeology. American Antiquity. 43, 2, 303–309.
[95]
Habgood, P.J. and Franklin, N.R. 2008. The revolution that didn’t arrive: A review of Pleistocene Sahul. Journal of Human Evolution. 55, 2 (Aug. 2008), 187–222. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2007.11.006.
[96]
Hall, R. et al. 2004. Pleistocene migration routes into the Americas: Human biological adaptations and environmental constraints. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 13, 4 (Jul. 2004), 132–144. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20013.
[97]
Hardy-Smith, T. and Edwards, P.C. 2004. The Garbage Crisis in prehistory: artefact discard patterns at the Early Natufian site of Wadi Hammeh 27 and the origins of household refuse disposal strategies. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 23, 3 (Sep. 2004), 253–289. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2004.05.001.
[98]
Harrold, F.B. 1989. Mousterian, Chatelperronian and early Aurignacian in Western Europe: continuity or discontinuity? The Human revolution: behavioural and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans. Edinburgh University Press. 677–713.
[99]
Haynes, G. 2013. Extinctions in North America’s Late Glacial landscapes. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 89–98. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2010.07.026.
[100]
Henry, Donald O. 1989. From foraging to agriculture: the Levant at the end of the Ice Age. University of Pennsylvania Press.
[101]
Henshilwood, C. and et al 2004. MIddle Stone Age shell beads from South Africa. Science. 304, 5669 (2004), 404–404.
[102]
Henshilwood, C.S. et al. 2001. Blombos Cave, Southern Cape, South Africa: Preliminary Report on the 1992–1999 Excavations of the Middle Stone Age Levels. Journal of Archaeological Science. 28, 4 (Apr. 2001), 421–448. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.2000.0638.
[103]
Henshilwood, C.S. and F., d’Errico 2005. Being modern in the Middle Stone Age: individuals and innovation. The hominid individual in context: archaeological investigations of lower and middle Palaeolithic landscapes, locales, and artefacts. Routledge. 244–264.
[104]
Henshilwood, C.S. and Marean, C.W. 2003. The Origin of Modern Human Behavior: Critique of the Models and Their Test Implications. Current Anthropology. 44, 5 (Dec. 2003), 627–651. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/377665.
[105]
Higham, T. et al. 2010. Chronology of the Grotte du Renne (France) and implications for the context of ornaments and human remains within the Chatelperronian. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107, 47 (Nov. 2010), 20234–20239. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1007963107.
[106]
Hillman, G. 1996. Late Pleistocene changes in wild plant-foods available to hunter-gatherers of the northern Fertile Crescent: possible preludes to cereal cultivation. The origins and spread of agriculture and pastoralism in Eurasia. UCL Press. 159–203.
[107]
Hiscock, Peter 2008. Archaeology of ancient Australia. Routledge.
[108]
Hoffecker, J.F. 2005. Innovation and technological knowledge in the Upper Paleolithic of Northern Eurasia. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 14, 5 (Oct. 2005), 186–198. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20066.
[109]
Hoffecker, J.F. and Elias, S.A. 2003. Environment and archeology in Beringia. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 12, 1 (Feb. 2003), 34–49. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.10103.
[110]
Hoffecker, John F. 2002. Desolate landscapes: Ice-Age settlement in Eastern Europe. Rutgers University Press.
[111]
Hoffecker, John F. and Elias, Scott A. 2007. Human ecology of Beringia. Columbia University Press.
[112]
van Holst Pellekaan, S. 2013. Genetic evidence for the colonization of Australia. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 44–56. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.014.
[113]
Hovers, E. et al. 2003. An Early Case of Color Symbolism: Ochre Use by Modern Humans in Qafzeh Cave. Current Anthropology. 44, 4 (Aug. 2003), 491–522. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/375869.
[114]
Hovers, E. 2006. Neandertals and Modern Humans in the Middle Paleolithic of the Levant: What kind of interaction? When Neanderthals and modern humans met. Kerns. 65–85.
[115]
Ingold, Tim et al. 1988. Hunters and gatherers: 1: History, evolution and social change. Berg.
[116]
Ingold, Tim et al. 1988. Hunters and gatherers: 2: Property, power and ideology. Berg.
[117]
Inizan, Marie-Louise et al. 1992. The technology of knapped stone: followed by a multilingual vocabulary Arabic, English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Russian, Spanish. CREP.
[118]
J. D. Lewis-Williams, T. A. Dowson, Paul G. Bahn, H.-G. Bandi, Robert G. Bednarik, John Clegg, Mario Consens, Whitney Davis, Brigitte Delluc, Gilles Delluc, Paul Faulstich, John Halverson, Robert Layton, Colin Martindale, Vil Mirimanov, Christy G. Turner II, Joan M. Vastokas, Michael Winkelman and Alison Wylie The Signs of All Times: Entoptic Phenomena in Upper Palaeolithic Art [and Comments and Reply]. Current Anthropology. 29, 2, 201–245.
[119]
Jenkins, D.L. et al. 2012. Clovis Age Western Stemmed Projectile Points and Human Coprolites at the Paisley Caves. Science. 337, 6091 (Jul. 2012), 223–228. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1218443.
[120]
Jochim, M. 1987. Late Pleistocene refugia in Europe. The Pleistocene Old World: regional perspectives. Plenum. 317–332.
[121]
John Alroy 8AD. A Multispecies Overkill Simulation of the End-Pleistocene Megafaunal Mass Extinction. Science. 292, 5523 (8AD), 1893–1896.
[122]
John E. Yellen, Alison S. Brooks, Els Cornelissen, Michael J. Mehlman and Kathlyn Stewart 28AD. A Middle Stone Age Worked Bone Industry from Katanda, Upper Semliki Valley, Zaire. Science. 268, 5210 (28AD), 553–556.
[123]
Jones, R. 1999. Dating the human colonization of Australia: radiocarbon and luminescence revolutions. World prehistory: studies in memory of Grahame Clark. Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. 37–66.
[124]
Jöris, O. and Street, M. 2008. At the end of the 14C time scale—the Middle to Upper Paleolithic record of western Eurasia. Journal of Human Evolution. 55, 5 (Nov. 2008), 782–802. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2008.04.002.
[125]
Julien, M. 2003. A Magdalenian base camp at Pincevent, France. Perceived landscapes and built environments: the cultural geography of Late Paleolithic Eurasia. Archaeopress. 105–111.
[126]
Katherine I. Wright Ground-Stone Tools and Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence in Southwest Asia: Implications for the Transition to Farming. American Antiquity. 59, 2, 238–263.
[127]
Kelly, Robert L. 1995. The foraging spectrum: diversity in hunter-gatherer lifeways. Smithsonian Institution Press.
[128]
Klein, R. 1989. Biological and behavioural perspectives on modern human origins in Southern Africa. The Human revolution: behavioural and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans. Edinburgh University Press. 529–546.
[129]
Klein, Richard G. 2009. The human career: human biological and cultural origins. University of Chicago Press.
[130]
Knight, C. 1999. The origins of symbolic culture. The evolution of culture: an interdisciplinary view. Rutgers University Press. 193–212.
[131]
Kuhn, S.L. et al. 2001. Ornaments of the earliest Upper Paleolithic: New insights from the Levant. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 98, 13 (Jun. 2001), 7641–7646. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.121590798.
[132]
Lars Larsson The Mesolithic of Southern Scandinavia. Journal of World Prehistory. 4, 3, 257–309.
[133]
Larsson, L. 1999. Settlement and palaeoecology in the Scandinavian Mesolithic. World prehistory: studies in memory of Grahame Clark. Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. 87–106.
[134]
Larsson, Lars and International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe 2003. Mesolithic on the move: papers presented at the Sixth International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000. Oxbow.
[135]
Lawson, Andrew J. 2012. Painted caves: palaeolithic rock art in western Europe. Oxford University Press.
[136]
Layton, Robert 1992. Australian rock art: a new synthesis. Cambridge University Press.
[137]
Lee, Richard B. 1979. The !Kung San: men, women, and work in a foraging society. Cambridge University Press.
[138]
Lee, Richard B. et al. 1968. Man the hunter. Aldine Pub.Co.
[139]
Leore Grosman, Natalie D. Munro and Anna Belfer-Cohen 18AD. A 12,000-Year-Old Shaman Burial from the Southern Levant (Israel). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 105, 46 (18AD), 17665–17669.
[140]
Leroi-Gourhan, André et al. 1979. Lascaux inconnu. Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
[141]
Lewin, Roger 1998. Principles of human evolution: a core textbook. Blackwell Science.
[142]
Lewis-Williams, J. David 2002. The mind in the cave: consciousness and the origins of art. Thames & Hudson.
[143]
Lourandos, Harry 1997. Continent of hunter-gatherers: new perspectives in Australian prehistory. Cambridge University Press.
[144]
Lowe, J. J. and Walker, M. J. C. 1997. Reconstructing Quaternary environments. Prentice Hall.
[145]
Lowe, J.J. et al. 2008. Synchronisation of palaeoenvironmental events in the North Atlantic region during the Last Termination: a revised protocol recommended by the INTIMATE group. Quaternary Science Reviews. 27, 1–2 (Jan. 2008), 6–17. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2007.09.016.
[146]
Luis Alberto Borrero The Prehistoric Exploration and Colonization of Fuego-Patagonia. Journal of World Prehistory. 13, 3, 321–355.
[147]
Maher, L.A. et al. 2012. The Pre-Natufian Epipaleolithic: Long-term Behavioral Trends in the Levant. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 21, 2 (Mar. 2012), 69–81. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.21307.
[148]
Maher, L.A. et al. 2012. Twenty Thousand-Year-Old Huts at a Hunter-Gatherer Settlement in Eastern Jordan. PLoS ONE. 7, 2 (Feb. 2012). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031447.
[149]
Marc Verhoeven Beyond Boundaries: Nature, Culture and a Holistic Approach to Domestication in the Levant. Journal of World Prehistory. 18, 3, 179–282.
[150]
Marean, C.W. 2010. Pinnacle Point Cave 13B (Western Cape Province, South Africa) in context: The Cape Floral kingdom, shellfish, and modern human origins. Journal of Human Evolution. 59, 3–4 (Sep. 2010), 425–443. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2010.07.011.
[151]
Marean, C.W. and Assefa, Z. 1999. Zooarcheological evidence for the faunal exploitation behavior of Neandertals and early modern humans. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 8, 1 (1999), 22–37. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1999)8:1<22::AID-EVAN7>3.0.CO;2-F.
[152]
Marlowe, F.W. 2005. Hunter-gatherers and human evolution. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 14, 2 (Apr. 2005), 54–67. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20046.
[153]
Mcbrearty, S. and Brooks, A.S. 2000. The revolution that wasn’t: a new interpretation of the origin of modern human behavior. Journal of Human Evolution. 39, 5 (Nov. 2000), 453–563. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jhev.2000.0435.
[154]
Mcbrearty, S. and Brooks, A.S. 2000. The revolution that wasn’t: a new interpretation of the origin of modern human behavior. Journal of Human Evolution. 39, 5 (Nov. 2000), 453–563. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jhev.2000.0435.
[155]
McCartan, Sinéad and International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe 2009. Mesolithic horizons: papers presented at the Seventh International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Belfast 2005. Oxbow Books.
[156]
Mellars, P. 2006. A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia. Nature. 439, 7079 (Feb. 2006), 931–935. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04521.
[157]
Mellars, P. 2006. A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia. Nature. 439, 7079 (Feb. 2006), 931–935. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04521.
[158]
Mellars, P. 2006. Archeology and the dispersal of modern humans in Europe: Deconstructing the "Aurignacian”. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 15, 5 (Oct. 2006), 167–182. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20103.
[159]
Mellars, P. The ecological basis of social complexity in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern France. Prehistoric hunter-gatherers : the emergence of cultural complexity / edited by T. Douglas Price, James A. Brown. 271–297.
[160]
Mellars, Paul 2007. Rethinking the human revolution: new behavioural and biological perspectives on the origin and dispersal of modern humans. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[161]
Mellars, Paul 2007. Rethinking the human revolution: new behavioural and biological perspectives on the origin and dispersal of modern humans. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[162]
Mellars, Paul 2007. Rethinking the human revolution: new behavioural and biological perspectives on the origin and dispersal of modern humans. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[163]
Mellars, Paul et al. 1998. Star Carr in context: new archaeological and palaeoecological investigations at the Early Mesolithic site of Star Carr, North Yorkshire. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[164]
Mellars, Paul 1996. The Neanderthal legacy: an archaeological perspective from western Europe. Princeton University Press.
[165]
Mellars, Paul 1996. The Neanderthal legacy: an archaeological perspective from western Europe. Princeton University Press.
[166]
Meltzer, David J. 2009. First peoples in a new world: colonizing ice age America. University of California Press.
[167]
Meltzer, D.J. and et al. 1994. On a Pleistocene human occupation at Pedra Furada, Brazil. Antiquity. 68, 261 (1994), 695–714.
[168]
Mitchell, Peter John 2002. The Archaeology of Southern Africa. Cambridge University Press.
[169]
Mithen, S. 2001. The Mesolithic age. The Oxford illustrated history of prehistoric Europe. Oxford University Press. 79–135.
[170]
Mithen, Steven J. 1998. The prehistory of the mind: a search for the origins of art, religion and science. Phoenix.
[171]
Morwood, M.J. et al. 2004. Archaeology and age of a new hominin from Flores in eastern Indonesia. Nature. 431, 7012 (Oct. 2004), 1087–1091. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02956.
[172]
Morwood, M.J. et al. 1998. Fission-track ages of stone tools and fossils on the east Indonesian island of Flores. Nature. 392, 6672 (Mar. 1998), 173–176. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/32401.
[173]
Mulvaney, Derek John and Kamminga, Johan 1999. Prehistory of Australia. Smithsonian Institution Press.
[174]
Mulvaney, K. 2013. Iconic imagery: Pleistocene rock art development across northern Australia. Quaternary International. 285, (Feb. 2013), 99–110. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.07.020.
[175]
Nadel, D. and Werker, E. 1999. The oldest ever brush hut plant remains from Ohalo II, Jordan Valley, Israel (19,000 BP). Antiquity. 73, 282 (1999), 755–764.
[176]
Nash, George 1998. Exchange, status and mobility: Mesolithic portable art of southern Scandinavia. Archaeopress.
[177]
Natalie D. Munro Zooarchaeological Measures of Hunting Pressure and Occupation Intensity in the Natufian. Current Anthropology. 45, S4.
[178]
O’Connor, S. et al. 2011. Pelagic Fishing at 42,000 Years Before the Present and the Maritime Skills of Modern Humans. Science. 334, 6059 (Nov. 2011), 1117–1121. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1207703.
[179]
Olsen, S.L. Solutré: A theoretical approach to the reconstruction of Upper Palaeolithic hunting strategies. Journal of Human Evolution. 18, 4, 295–327.
[180]
Olszewski, D. 1991. Social complexity in the Natufian? Assessing the relationship of ideas and data. Perspectives on the past: theoretical biases in Mediterranean hunter-gatherer research. University of Pennsylvania Press. 322–340.
[181]
Paul Pettitt and Alistair Pike Dating European Palaeolithic Cave Art: Progress, Prospects, Problems. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 14, 1, 27–47.
[182]
Pearson, O.M. 2004. Has the combination of genetic and fossil evidence solved the riddle of modern human origins? Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 13, 4 (Jul. 2004), 145–159. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20017.
[183]
Peterkin, Gail Larsen et al. 1993. Hunting and animal exploitation in the later Palaeolithic and Mesolithic of Eurasia. American Anthropological Association.
[184]
Peterkin, Gail Larsen et al. 1993. Hunting and animal exploitation in the later Palaeolithic and Mesolithic of Eurasia. American Anthropological Association.
[185]
Petit, J.R. et al. 1999. Climate and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostok ice core, Antarctica. Nature. 399, 6735 (Jun. 1999), 429–436. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/20859.
[186]
Pettitt, Paul et al. 2007. Palaeolithic cave art at Creswell Crags in European context. Oxford University Press.
[187]
Pettitt, Paul 2011. The palaeolithic origins of human burial. Routledge.
[188]
Pettitt, Paul 2011. The palaeolithic origins of human burial. Routledge.
[189]
Pidoplichko, I. H. and Allsworth-Jones, P. 1998. Upper Palaeolithic dwellings of mammoth bones in the Ukraine: Kiev-Kirillovskii, Gontsy, Dobranichevka, Mezin and Mezhirich. British Archaeological Reports.
[190]
Piel-Desruisseaux, Jean-Luc 1986. Outils préhistoriques: forme, fabrication, utilisation. Masson.
[191]
Pike, A.W.G. et al. 2012. U-Series Dating of Paleolithic Art in 11 Caves in Spain. Science. 336, 6087 (Jun. 2012), 1409–1413. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1219957.
[192]
Powell, A. et al. 2009. Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behavior. Science. 324, 5932 (Jun. 2009), 1298–1301. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1170165.
[193]
Price, T.D. 1985. Affluent foragers of Mesolithic Southern Scandinavia. Prehistoric hunter-gatherers : the emergence of cultural complexity. Academic Press. 341–363.
[194]
Price, T.D. 2000. The introduction of farming in Northern Europe. Europe’s first farmers. Cambridge University press. 260–300.
[195]
Price, T.D. and Gebauer, A.B. 1992. The final frontier: foragers to farmers in Southern Scandinavia. Prehistory Press.
[196]
Rampino, M.R. and Self, S. 1992. Volcanic winter and accelerated glaciation following the Toba super-eruption. Nature. 359, 6390 (Sep. 1992), 50–52. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/359050a0.
[197]
Rasmussen, M. et al. 2011. An Aboriginal Australian Genome Reveals Separate Human Dispersals into Asia. Science. 334, 6052 (Oct. 2011), 94–98. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1211177.
[198]
Reich, D. et al. 2010. Genetic history of an archaic hominin group from Denisova Cave in Siberia. Nature. 468, 7327 (Dec. 2010), 1053–1060. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09710.
[199]
Richard Cosgrove Forty-Two Degrees South: The Archaeology of Late Pleistocene Tasmania. Journal of World Prehistory. 13, 4, 357–402.
[200]
Richards, M.P. 2009. Stable isotope evidence for European Upper Palaeolithic diets. The evolution of hominin diets: integrating approaches to the study of palaeolithic subsistence. Springer. 251–257.
[201]
Roberts, Neil 1998. The Holocene: an environmental history. Blackwell.
[202]
Roberts, R.G. 2001. New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna: Continent-Wide Extinction About 46,000 Years Ago. Science. 292, 5523 (Jun. 2001), 1888–1892. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1060264.
[203]
Roebroeks, Wil and European Science Foundation 2000. Hunters of the golden age: the mid Upper Palaeolithic of Eurasia 30,000-20,00 BP. University of Leiden.
[204]
Rowley-Conwy, P. 1999. Economic prehistory in Southern Scandinavia. World prehistory: studies in memory of Grahame Clark. Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. 125–160.
[205]
Rowley-Conwy, P. et al. 2001. Hunter-gatherers: an interdisciplinary perspective. Cambridge University Press.
[206]
Ruspoli, Mario et al. 1987. The cave of Lascaux: the final photographic record. Thames and Hudson.
[207]
Sahlins, M.D. 2004. The original affluent society. Stone Age economics. Routledge. 1–39.
[208]
Sergey Slobodin Northeast Asia in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene. World Archaeology. 30, 3, 484–502.
[209]
Shea, J.J. 1998. Neandertal and Early Modern Human Behavioral Variability A Regional‐Scale Approach to Lithic Evidence for Hunting in the Levantine Mousterian. Current Anthropology. 39, S1 (Jun. 1998), S45–S78. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/204690.
[210]
Shea, J.J. 2003. The Middle Paleolithic of the East Mediterranean Levant. Journal of World Prehistory. 17, 4 (Dec. 2003), 313–394. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1023/B:JOWO.0000020194.01496.fe.
[211]
Shea, John J. 2013. Stone tools in the Paleolithic and Neolithic near East: a guide. Cambridge University Press.
[212]
Skaarup, Jørgen et al. 2004. Møllegabet II: a submerged Mesolithic settlement in southern Denmark. Archaeopress.
[213]
Smith, Christopher 1992. Late Stone Age hunters of the British Isles. Routledge.
[214]
Soffer, O. Patterns of intensification as seen from the Upper Palaeolithic of the Central Russian Plain. Prehistoric hunter-gatherers : the emergence of cultural complexity / edited by T. Douglas Price, James A. Brown. 235–270.
[215]
Soffer, O. 1989. Storage, sedentism and the Eurasian Palaeolithic record. Antiquity. 63, 241 (1989), 719–732.
[216]
Soffer, O. 1993. The pyrotechnology of performance art: Moravian Venuses and wolverines. Before Lascaux: the complex record of the Early Upper Paleolithic. CRC Press. 259–275.
[217]
Soffer, O. et al. 2000. The "Venus” Figurines: Textiles, Basketry, Gender, and Status in the Upper Paleolithic. Current Anthropology. 41, 4 (Aug. 2000), 511–537. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/317381.
[218]
Soffer, O. and et al. 1997. Cultural stratigraphy at Mezhirich, an Upper Palaeolithic site in Ukraine with multiple occupation. Antiquity. 71, 271 (1997), 48–62.
[219]
Soffer, Olga 1985. The Upper Paleolithic of the Central Russian Plain. Academic Press.
[220]
Soffer, Olga and Gamble, Clive 1989. The World at 18,000 BP: Vol.1: High latitudes. Unwin Hyman.
[221]
Soffer, Olga and Praslov, N. D. 1993. From Kostenki to Clovis: Upper palaeolithic-paleo-Indian adaptations. Plenum Press.
[222]
Steele, J. and Politis, G. 2009. AMS 14C dating of early human occupation of southern South America. Journal of Archaeological Science. 36, 2 (Feb. 2009), 419–429. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2008.09.024.
[223]
Stiner, M.C. et al. 2000. The Tortoise and the Hare: Small‐Game Use, the Broad‐Spectrum Revolution, and Paleolithic Demography. Current Anthropology. 41, 1 (Feb. 2000), 39–79. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/300102.
[224]
Straus, Lawrence Guy 1996. Humans at the end of the Ice Age: the archaeology of the Pleistocene-Holocene transition. Plenum Press.
[225]
Straus, L.G. 2005. The upper paleolithic of Europe: An overview. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 4, 1 (Jun. 2005), 4–16. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.1360040103.
[226]
Stringer, C. 2002. Modern human origins: progress and prospects. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 357, 1420 (Apr. 2002), 563–579. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2001.1057.
[227]
Stuart J. Fiedel The Peopling of the New World: Present Evidence, New Theories, and Future Directions. Journal of Archaeological Research. 8, 1, 39–103.
[228]
Stutz, A.J. et al. 2009. Increasing the resolution of the Broad Spectrum Revolution in the Southern Levantine Epipaleolithic (19–12 ka). Journal of Human Evolution. 56, 3 (Mar. 2009), 294–306. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2008.10.004.
[229]
Summerhayes, G.R. et al. 2010. Human Adaptation and Plant Use in Highland New Guinea 49,000 to 44,000 Years Ago. Science. 330, 6000 (Oct. 2010), 78–81. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1193130.
[230]
Svoboda, Jiří et al. 1996. Hunters between East and West: the Paleolithic of Moravia. Plenum Press.
[231]
Texier, P.-J. and et al 2010. A Howiesons Poort tradition of engraving ostrich eggshell containers dated to 60,000 years ago at Diepkloof Rock Shelter, South Africa. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of USA. 107, 14 (2010), 6180–6185.
[232]
Turnmire, Karen L. et al. 1999. Ice Age people of North America: environments, origins, and adaptations. Oregon State University Press for the Center for the Study of the First Americans.
[233]
Valla, François Raymond et al. 1991. The Natufian culture in the Levant. International Monographs in Prehistory.
[234]
Van Andel, T.H. and Tzedakis, P.C. 1996. Palaeolithic landscapes of Europe and environs, 150,000-25,000 years ago: An overview. Quaternary Science Reviews. 15, 5–6 (1996), 481–500.
[235]
Van Andel, Tjeerd H. et al. 2003. Neanderthals and modern humans in the European landscape during the last glaciation: archaeological results of the Stage 3 project. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[236]
Van Andel, Tjeerd H. et al. 2003. Neanderthals and modern humans in the European landscape during the last glaciation: archaeological results of the Stage 3 project. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
[237]
Van Peer, P. 1998. The Nile Corridor and the Out‐of‐Africa Model An Examination of the Archaeological Record. Current Anthropology. 39, S1 (Jun. 1998), S115–S140. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/204692.
[238]
Vanhaeren, M. 2006. Middle Palaeolithic shell beads in Israel and Algeria. Science. 312, (2006), 1785–1788.
[239]
Vasilʹev, S. A. et al. 2003. Perceived landscapes and built environments: the cultural geography of Late Paleolithic Eurasia. Archaeopress.
[240]
Waguespack, N.M. 2007. Why we’re still arguing about the Pleistocene occupation of the Americas. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 16, 2 (Apr. 2007), 63–74. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20124.
[241]
Walker, M. J. C. 2005. Quaternary dating methods. J. Wiley.
[242]
Waters, M.R. et al. 2011. Pre-Clovis Mastodon Hunting 13,800 Years Ago at the Manis Site, Washington. Science. 334, 6054 (Oct. 2011), 351–353. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1207663.
[243]
Webb, S. G. 2006. The first boat people. Cambridge University Press.
[244]
White, R. 1995. Ivory personal ornaments of Aurignacian age: technological, social and symbolic perspectives. Le travail et l’usage de l’ivoire au paléolithique supérieur: actes de la Table ronde : Ravello, 29-31, mai 1992. Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, Libreria dello Stato. 29–62.
[245]
White, R. 2006. The Women of Brassempouy: A Century of Research and Interpretation. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 13, 4 (Dec. 2006), 250–303. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10816-006-9023-z.
[246]
Whittaker, John C. 1994. Flintknapping: making and understanding stone tools. University of Texas Press.
[247]
Woodburn, J. Egalitarian societies. Man. 17, 3, 431–451.
[248]
Woodburn, J. 2005. Egalitarian societies revisited. Property and equality. Berghahn. 18–31.
[249]
Yellen, John E. 1977. Archaeological approaches to the present: models for reconstructing the past. Academic Press.
[250]
Young, Robert 2000. Mesolithic lifeways: current research from Britain and Ireland. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester.
[251]
Zilhão, J. 2006. Neandertals and moderns mixed, and it matters. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 15, 5 (Oct. 2006), 183–195. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.20110.
[252]
Zilhao, J. et al. 2010. Symbolic use of marine shells and mineral pigments by Iberian Neandertals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107, 3 (Jan. 2010), 1023–1028. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0914088107.
[253]
Zvelebil, M. 1998. Agricultural frontiers. Neolithic origins and the transition to farming in the Baltic Basin. Harvesting the sea, farming the forest: the emergence of Neolithic societies in the Baltic Region. Sheffield Academic Press. 9–27.
[254]
Zvelebil, M. 1998. What’s in a name: the Mesolithic, Neolithic and social change at the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition. Understanding the Neolithic of north-western Europe. Cruithne Press. 1–36.
[255]
Zvelebil, Marek 1986. Hunters in transition: mesolithic societies of temperate Eurasia and their transition to farming. Cambridge University Press.
[256]
1998. An event stratigraphy for the Last Termination in the North Atlantic region based on the Greenland ice-core record: a proposal by the INTIMATE group. Journal of Quaternary Science. 13, 4 (1998), 283–292. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-1417(199807/08)13:4<283::AID-JQS386>3.0.CO;2-A.
[257]
Journal of Human Evolution. 57, 5, 437–648.