Publications by authors named "Simon J Armitage"

Over the last 30 years, high-resolution site documentation has rapidly developed, with analogue drawings and film photography being replaced with high-precision digital recordings. Today, most archaeological field data sets are produced using digital tools that store spatial and visual information in various digital formats directly, i.e.

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Two distemper paint samples taken from decorative boards in Uvdal stave church, Norway, were analysed using palaeoproteomics, with an aim of identifying their binder and possible contaminants. The results point at the use of calfskin to produce hide glue as the original paint binder, and are consistent with the instructions of binder production and resource allocation in the historical records of Norway. Although we did not observe any evidence of prior restoration treatments using protein-based materials, we found abundant traces of human saliva proteins, as well as a few oats and barley peptides, likely deposited together on the boards during their discovery in the 1970s.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This study explores unique behaviors of early modern humans during Africa's Middle Stone Age, particularly at the archaeological site Varsche Rivier 003 (VR003), dated to 92-80,000 years ago.
  • - Key innovations at VR003 include ostrich eggshell tools, long-distance transport of marine mollusks, and advanced stone tool production, which are not found in wetter regions nearby at that time.
  • - These innovations coincide with a period of favorable climate conditions, but they vanished as winter rainfall increased, suggesting that environmental changes significantly influenced cultural and technological developments in early human societies.
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Pleistocene hominin dispersals out of, and back into, Africa necessarily involved traversing the diverse and often challenging environments of Southwest Asia. Archaeological and palaeontological records from the Levantine woodland zone document major biological and cultural shifts, such as alternating occupations by Homo sapiens and Neanderthals. However, Late Quaternary cultural, biological and environmental records from the vast arid zone that constitutes most of Southwest Asia remain scarce, limiting regional-scale insights into changes in hominin demography and behaviour.

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The Arabian Peninsula is a critical geographic landmass situated between Africa and the rest of Eurasia. Climatic shifts across the Pleistocene periodically produced wetter conditions in Arabia, dramatically altering the spatial distribution of hominins both within and between continents. This is particularly true of Acheulean hominins, who appear to have been more tethered to water sources than Middle Palaeolithic hominins.

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The origin and evolution of hominin mortuary practices are topics of intense interest and debate. Human burials dated to the Middle Stone Age (MSA) are exceedingly rare in Africa and unknown in East Africa. Here we describe the partial skeleton of a roughly 2.

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Article Synopsis
  • Only a few Acheulean sites in the Eastern Sahara region have been dated, hindering our understanding of early hominin behavior due to limited datable material.
  • Recent excavations at EDAR 7 in the Atbara region of Sudan have uncovered a complete Acheulean stone tool assemblage and provided valuable insights into the cultural practices of early humans in this area.
  • The site is interpreted as a former campsite, revealing evidence of diverse stone tool production techniques and indicating that Homo erectus occupied the region during Middle Pleistocene humid periods.
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The nature of human dispersals out of Africa has remained elusive because of the poor resolution of paleoecological data in direct association with remains of the earliest non-African people. Here, we report hominin and non-hominin mammalian tracks from an ancient lake deposit in the Arabian Peninsula, dated within the last interglacial. The findings, it is argued, likely represent the oldest securely dated evidence for in Arabia.

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The originally published version of this Article contained an error in Fig. 3, whereby an additional unrelated graph was overlaid on top of the magnetic susceptibility plot. Furthermore, the Article title contained an error in the capitalisation of 'Stone Age'.

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The Middle to Later Stone Age transition in Africa has been debated as a significant shift in human technological, cultural, and cognitive evolution. However, the majority of research on this transition is currently focused on southern Africa due to a lack of long-term, stratified sites across much of the African continent. Here, we report a 78,000-year-long archeological record from Panga ya Saidi, a cave in the humid coastal forest of Kenya.

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Understanding the timing and character of the expansion of Homo sapiens out of Africa is critical for inferring the colonization and admixture processes that underpin global population history. It has been argued that dispersal out of Africa had an early phase, particularly ~130-90 thousand years ago (ka), that reached only the East Mediterranean Levant, and a later phase, ~60-50 ka, that extended across the diverse environments of Eurasia to Sahul. However, recent findings from East Asia and Sahul challenge this model.

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Article Synopsis
  • The African Humid Period, from the deglacial to mid-Holocene, marked a time of significantly wetter conditions in North Africa, with the lakes and landscapes differing greatly from today's arid environment.
  • Evidence gathered indicates that Lake Mega-Chad reached its highest levels around 11.5 thousand years ago (ka), but experienced a sudden drop in water levels by around 5 ka, suggesting an abrupt end to the humid conditions.
  • The study highlights the recent desiccation of the Bodélé Basin, where dust production and its ecological impacts might have been overstated or only recently emerged in the last 1,000 years.
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The timing of the dispersal of anatomically modern humans (AMH) out of Africa is a fundamental question in human evolutionary studies. Existing data suggest a rapid coastal exodus via the Indian Ocean rim around 60,000 years ago. We present evidence from Jebel Faya, United Arab Emirates, demonstrating human presence in eastern Arabia during the last interglacial.

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Evidence increasingly suggests that sub-Saharan Africa is at the center of human evolution and understanding routes of dispersal "out of Africa" is thus becoming increasingly important. The Sahara Desert is considered by many to be an obstacle to these dispersals and a Nile corridor route has been proposed to cross it. Here we provide evidence that the Sahara was not an effective barrier and indicate how both animals and humans populated it during past humid phases.

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