10 results match your criteria: "National Institute of Archaeology with Museum[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The dispersal of Homo sapiens during MIS 3 in the Late Pleistocene, characterized by technological changes known as Initial Upper Paleolithic (IUP), is examined through excavations at Bacho Kiro Cave in Bulgaria.
  • Excavations from 2015 to 2021 uncovered over 2,000 lithic artifacts dated between 45,040 and 43,280 cal BP, alongside fauna remains and human fossils, revealing insights into the raw material use and lithic production techniques.
  • Analysis of the lithics indicates long-distance mobility for raw materials, evidence of advanced knapping techniques, and on-site tool curation, contributing to a better understanding of lithic economies across different IUP
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Artefacts made from stones, bones and teeth are fundamental to our understanding of human subsistence strategies, behaviour and culture in the Pleistocene. Although these resources are plentiful, it is impossible to associate artefacts to specific human individuals who can be morphologically or genetically characterized, unless they are found within burials, which are rare in this time period. Thus, our ability to discern the societal roles of Pleistocene individuals based on their biological sex or genetic ancestry is limited.

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Initial Upper Paleolithic bone technology and personal ornaments at Bacho Kiro Cave (Bulgaria).

J Hum Evol

June 2022

Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany; Collège de France, 11, place Marcelin Berthelot, Paris Cedex 05, 75231, France.

The expansion of Homo sapiens and our interaction with local environments, including the replacement or absorption of local populations, is a key component in understanding the evolution of our species. Of special interest are artifacts made from hard animal tissues from layers at Bacho Kiro Cave (Bulgaria) that have been attributed to the Initial Upper Paleolithic. The Initial Upper Paleolithic is characterized by Levallois-like blade technologies that can co-occur with bone tools and ornaments and likely represents the dispersal of H.

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Bone surface modifications are crucial for understanding human subsistence and dietary behaviour, and can inform about the techniques employed in the production and use of bone tools. Permission to destructively sample such unique artefacts is not always granted. The recent development of non-destructive proteomic extraction techniques has provided some alternatives for the analysis of rare and culturally significant artefacts, including bone tools and personal ornaments.

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Subsistence behavior during the Initial Upper Paleolithic in Europe: Site use, dietary practice, and carnivore exploitation at Bacho Kiro Cave (Bulgaria).

J Hum Evol

December 2021

Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103, Leipzig, Germany; Collège de France, 11, place Marcelin Berthelot, 75231, Paris Cedex 05, France.

The behavioral dynamics underlying the expansion of Homo sapiens into Europe remains a crucial topic in human evolution. Owing to poor bone preservation, past studies have strongly focused on the Initial Upper Paleolithic (IUP) stone tool record. Recent excavations and extensive radiocarbon dating at Bacho Kiro Cave (Bulgaria) pushed back the arrival of IUP H.

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Article Synopsis
  • The expansion of humans across Eurasia was a significant event in human evolution, allowing our species to spread to every continent.
  • Current theories suggest these expansions only happened during warm climatic periods, but new research challenges this view.
  • Analysis of faunal remains from Bacho Kiro Cave in Bulgaria reveals that humans lived in much colder climates around 45,000 years ago, indicating that warm conditions were not necessary for early human presence in Europe.
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Uniparentally-inherited markers on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and the non-recombining regions of the Y chromosome (NRY), have been used for the past 30 years to investigate the history of humans from a maternal and paternal perspective. Researchers have preferred mtDNA due to its abundance in the cells, and comparatively high substitution rate. Conversely, the NRY is less susceptible to back mutations and saturation, and is potentially more informative than mtDNA owing to its longer sequence length.

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Modern humans appeared in Europe by at least 45,000 years ago, but the extent of their interactions with Neanderthals, who disappeared by about 40,000 years ago, and their relationship to the broader expansion of modern humans outside Africa are poorly understood. Here we present genome-wide data from three individuals dated to between 45,930 and 42,580 years ago from Bacho Kiro Cave, Bulgaria. They are the earliest Late Pleistocene modern humans known to have been recovered in Europe so far, and were found in association with an Initial Upper Palaeolithic artefact assemblage.

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The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Europe witnessed the replacement and partial absorption of local Neanderthal populations by Homo sapiens populations of African origin. However, this process probably varied across regions and its details remain largely unknown. In particular, the duration of chronological overlap between the two groups is much debated, as are the implications of this overlap for the nature of the biological and cultural interactions between Neanderthals and H.

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Evidence of Neanderthals in the Balkans: The infant radius from Kozarnika Cave (Bulgaria).

J Hum Evol

October 2017

PACEA-UMR5199 CNRS, Université de Bordeaux, Allée Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, Bâtiment B18, CS50023, 33615 Pessac Cedex, France. Electronic address:

Excavations conducted by a Bulgarian-French team at Kozarnika Cave (Balkans, Bulgaria) during several seasons yielded a long Paleolithic archaeological sequence and led to the discovery of important faunal, lithic, and human samples. This paper aims to describe the unpublished radius shaft of an infant who died approximately before the sixth month postnatal that was recovered from layer 10b, which contained East Balkan Levallois Mousterian with bifacial leaf points. The layer was dated between 130 and 200 ka (large mammals biochronology) and between 128 ± 13 ka and 183 ± 14 ka (OSL), i.

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