Publications by authors named "Ya-Mei Hou"

Article Synopsis
  • Homo sapiens began expanding into southeastern Europe around 47,000 years ago, using Initial Upper Palaeolithic (IUP) tools, and reached western Siberia by approximately 45,000 years ago.
  • H. sapiens also appeared in northeastern Asia around 40,000 years ago, with evidence of their presence at a site in China dating back to 43-41,000 years ago.
  • The site of Shiyu in northern China, dated to about 45,000 years ago, showcases advanced cultural behaviors through its stone tools, long-distance trade of obsidian, enhanced hunting techniques, and the discovery of a human cranial bone.
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Levallois approaches are one of the best known variants of prepared-core technologies, and are an important hallmark of stone technologies developed around 300,000 years ago in Africa and west Eurasia. Existing archaeological evidence suggests that the stone technology of east Asian hominins lacked a Levallois component during the late Middle Pleistocene epoch and it is not until the Late Pleistocene (around 40,000-30,000 years ago) that this technology spread into east Asia in association with a dispersal of modern humans. Here we present evidence of Levallois technology from the lithic assemblage of the Guanyindong Cave site in southwest China, dated to approximately 170,000-80,000 years ago.

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Donggutuo (DGT) is one of the richest archaeological localities in the Nihewan Basin of North China, thereby providing key information about the technological behaviours of early hominins in eastern Asia. Although DGT has been subject of multiple excavations and technological studies over the past several decades, few detailed studies on the lithic assemblages have been published. Here we summarize and describe the DGT lithic assemblages, examining stone tool reduction methods and technological skills.

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Xiaochangliang (XCL), located in the Nihewan Basin of North China, is a key archaeological locality for understanding the behavioural evolution of early humans. XCL dates to ca. 1.

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