Publication date: August 2019Source: Journal of Human Evolution, Volume 133Author(s): Justin Pargeter, Nada Khreisheh, Dietrich StoutAbstractDespite its theoretical importance, the process of stone tool-making skill acquisition remains understudied and poorly understood. The challenges and costs of skill learning constitute an oft-neglected factor in the evaluation of alternative adaptive strategies and a potential source of bias in cultural transmission. Similarly, theory and data indicate that...
Publication date: August 2019Source: Journal of Human Evolution, Volume 133Author(s): Maïlys Richard, Christophe Falguères, Hélène Valladas, Bassam Ghaleb, Edwige Pons-Branchu, Norbert Mercier, Daniel Richter, Nicholas J. ConardAbstractGeißenklösterle Cave (Germany) is one of the most important Paleolithic sites in Europe, as it is characterized by human occupation during the Middle and early Upper Paleolithic. Aurignacian layers prior to 37–38 ka cal BP feature both musical and figurative art objects...
Publication date: August 2019Source: Journal of Human Evolution, Volume 133Author(s): Christian Roos, Maximilian Kothe, David M. Alba, Eric Delson, Dietmar ZinnerAbstractFossil evidence indicates that numerous catarrhine clades of African origin expanded or shifted their ranges into Eurasia, among them macaques Macaca Lacépède, 1799. Macaques represent the sister taxon of African papionins and can thus be used as a model comparing an ‘out-of-Africa’ with an intra-African, e.g., baboons—Papio Erxleben,...
Publication date: August 2019Source: Journal of Human Evolution, Volume 133Author(s): Antoine Balzeau
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