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25.04.2005

Ancient jaw bone raises questions over early man

New research has revealed Britain's oldest fragment of modern human - a jaw bone unearthed in the Westcountry - is 6,000 years older than previously thought. Carbon dating had indicated the piece of jaw bone, with only three teeth, originated around 31,000 years ago. But the specimen was recently deemed suspect, because it had been strengthened with paper glue some time around its excavation from Kents Cavern, Torquay, in 1927.

The find was made by the Torquay Natural History Society, and identified by Sir Allen Keith, the top human anatomist of his day. But only in the 1980s was its significance recognised. Now, Dr Roger Jacobi of the British Museum and Dr Tom Higham from the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit have conducted new research. Their findings indicate the piece actually dates back between 37,000 and 40,000 years ... Stone Pages Archaeo News

21.04.2005

Belgians Give Iran a Hand to Study Aurignacian Residence

The historical cave of Yafteh in Khorram Abad of Lorestan province, west of Iran, will soon host a group of Iranian and Belgian archaeologists to excavate the area and study remains of the ancient human beings living there.

Aurignacian is the name of a culture of the Upper Palaeolithic present in Europe and south west Asia. It dates to between 34,000 and 23,000 B.C. The name originates from the type site of Aurignac in the Haute Garonne area of France ... The dating studies carried out by Yale University showed that the tools found in the cave dated back to 40,000 to 28,000 years ago ... CHN - News

13.04.2005

"Just a Lonesome Traveler, the Great Historical Bum"

A review by Douglas K. Charles:

AftertheiceAfter the Ice: A Global Human History, 20,000–5000 B.C. Steven Mithen. 622 pp. Harvard University Press, 2004. $29.95.

After the Ice offers a fascinating whirlwind tour of an underappreciated segment of human history. Author Steven Mithen, professor of early prehistory and head of the School of Human and Environmental Sciences at the University of Reading, has created a complex, multilayered account of life from 20,000 to 5000 B.C., during the late Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods.

The seeming highlights of the rise of Homo sapiens are well-known: the appearance of anatomically modern Homo sapiens in Africa sometime around 150,000 years ago, and our species' subsequent expansion out of Africa; replacement of the Neandertals in Europe by Cro-Magnons; the production of the spectacular cave art that followed in the same region; and the domestication of plants and animals in the Near East, leading to writing and the first appearances of urban life. But this is not the story that Mithen tells ... American Scientist Online

03.04.2005

Free trade may have finished off Neanderthals

Modern humans may have driven Neanderthals to extinction 30,000 years ago because Homo sapiens unlocked the secrets of free trade, say a group of US and Dutch economists. The theory could shed new light on the mysterious and sudden demise of the Neanderthals after over 260,000 years of healthy survival.

Anthropologists have considered a wide range of factors which may explain Neanderthal extinction, including biological, environmental and cultural causes. For example, one major study concluded that Neanderthals were less able to deal with plunging temperatures during the last glacial period ... New Scientist Breaking News

29.03.2005

Aurignacian Period

AurignacienflintDefinition: The Aurignacian period (40,000 to 28,000 years ago) is an Upper Paleolithic stone tool tradition, usually considered associated with both Homo sapiens and Neanderthals throughout Europe and parts of Africa. The Aurignacian's big leap forward is the production of blade tools by flaking pieces of stone off a larger piece of stone, thought to be an indication of more refined tool making.

Examples: St. Césaire (France), Chauvet Cave (France), L'Arbreda Cave (Spain) ... About Archaeology

16.02.2005

Museum's mammoth bones exhibit new life

MammothgreatplainsFor almost 30 years, the mammoth bones sat in a display case at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, just another fossilized piece of a long ago past.

Today, however, some scientists think the bones may provide crucial evidence that humans arrived in the Great Plains about 1,000 years earlier than thought ... DenverPost.com

15.02.2005

Plains hunters may have arrived 12,300 years ago

Mammoth and camel bones from a northwestern Kansas archaeological site appear to have been smashed by human hunters more than 12,000 years ago, a Denver scientist announced Monday ... Archaeology - Topix.net

For Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens, Was It De-Lovely?

NeanderthalThe scientists did not get around to the nitty-gritty question until the fourth hour of a two-and-a-half-day symposium on Neanderthals, held recently at New York University.

A strong consensus was emerging, they agreed, that the now-extinct Neanderthals were a distinct evolutionary entity from modern humans, presumably a different species. They were archaic members of the human family, robust with heavy brow ridges and forward-projecting faces, who lived in Europe and western Asia from at least 250,000 years ago until they vanished from the fossil record about 28,000 years ago ... The New York Times

12.02.2005

Murder of a sinister nature

Although we know that right and left-handed people have co-existed since the Upper Palaeolithic era (15–10,000 BC), little is known about the distribution of left-handedness or why the trait persists. While scientists believe handedness is mostly inherited, it is not so clear what the evolutionary advantages associated with being left-handed are. A new study recently published in Proceeding of the Royal Society (Biological Sciences) may offer a piece of the puzzle.

Researchers Charlotte Faurie and Michel Raymond of University Montpellier in France claim that there is a strong, positive correlation between the frequency of left-handers and the rate of murder in traditional societies ... Felix On-line

27.01.2005

Explore Taiwan's first museum of archeology

... The earliest culture arrived in Taiwan during the Paleolithic (or Old Stone Age) and was named the Changpin Culture, as its representative site was found in Changpin County, Taitung. That site has been dated as older than 15,000 years BP (before present). The earliest people mostly lived in caves along seashores, in shelters behind rocks or on coastal lowlands. They exploited their food from hunting and gathering and did not grow crops ... Taiwan News Online