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Lithic Reduction and Hominid Behavior in the Middle Palaeolithic of the Rhineland

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Conard, N. J.
  Author Adler, D. S. (University of Connecticut)
JOURNAL:
  Journal of Anthropological Research , 53(??), 147 - 175.
YEAR: 1997
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): None
DISCIPLINE: Anthropology/Archaeology
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-424-164 (Last edited on 2006/02/12 13:28:35 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Due to the increasing interest in studying the evolution of modern humans, much research over the last decade has been directed toward examining the organization of technology and its relationship to planning as it is documented in the archaeological record. In this paper, we use high resolution archaeological data from the recent excavation at the Middle Paleolithic locality of Wallertheim, Germany, to gain insight into the technological systems of late pre-modern hominids. We focus on the problem of demonstrating contemporaneity and documenting different patterns of lithic reduction at the site. The episodic data from Wallertheim provide contextual evidence for the curation of stone tools and a level of planning that surpasses that often attributed to pre-modern hominids. Data of this kind should ultimately prove useful in reconstructing Middle Paleolithic systems of settlement and land use. This work seeks to study Middle Paleolithic hominids in their own right and to move beyond the dichotomies between modern and non-modern hominids that have characterized much contemporary research.
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