New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania

The impact of changing climate on Upper Palaeolithic humans is a heavily debated topic and key to understand variability and change in Upper Palaeolithic material culture. To contribute to a better understanding of the timing and environmental context of changes in material culture, we need to focus...

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Main Authors: Noiret, Pierre, Chirica, Vasile, Libois, Timothée, Bodi, George, Branscombe, Tansy, Murphree, William Chase, Damblon, Freddy, Haesaerts, Paul, Bosch, Marjolein, Nigst, Philip R.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/224378
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:2268/224378 2023-05-15T16:29:18+02:00 New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania Noiret, Pierre Chirica, Vasile Libois, Timothée Bodi, George Branscombe, Tansy Murphree, William Chase Damblon, Freddy Haesaerts, Paul Bosch, Marjolein Nigst, Philip R. 2018-06-07 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/224378 en eng info:hdl:2268/224378 2268/224378 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/224378 undefined ORBi : Université de Liège Arts & humanities Archaeology Arts & sciences humaines Archéologie archeo geo Conference Output https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_c94f/ 2018 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:02:53Z The impact of changing climate on Upper Palaeolithic humans is a heavily debated topic and key to understand variability and change in Upper Palaeolithic material culture. To contribute to a better understanding of the timing and environmental context of changes in material culture, we need to focus on archaeological sites with a long sequence, secure climatic context, and abundant archaeology. In Eastern Europe, one of these sites is Mitoc-Malu Galben (Romania) with a semi-continuous loess-paleosol record from ~32 to 20 ka uncal BP. Embedded in this sequence are multiple Aurignacian and Gravettian archaeological horizons. Between 2013 and 2016 a international team re-excavated the site and focused on small excavations using high-resolution excavation and documentation methods and applied an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of the materials and their context. Here, we present our new results focusing on the lithic technology of two Aurignacinan and two Gravettian archaeological horizons. In particular, we present an Aurignacian assemblage which is securely dated to 27.8 ka uncal BP (Greenland Interstadial 5), and discuss implications of this evidence in a regional context. Other/Unknown Material Greenland Unknown Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic Arts & humanities
Archaeology
Arts & sciences humaines
Archéologie
archeo
geo
spellingShingle Arts & humanities
Archaeology
Arts & sciences humaines
Archéologie
archeo
geo
Noiret, Pierre
Chirica, Vasile
Libois, Timothée
Bodi, George
Branscombe, Tansy
Murphree, William Chase
Damblon, Freddy
Haesaerts, Paul
Bosch, Marjolein
Nigst, Philip R.
New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
topic_facet Arts & humanities
Archaeology
Arts & sciences humaines
Archéologie
archeo
geo
description The impact of changing climate on Upper Palaeolithic humans is a heavily debated topic and key to understand variability and change in Upper Palaeolithic material culture. To contribute to a better understanding of the timing and environmental context of changes in material culture, we need to focus on archaeological sites with a long sequence, secure climatic context, and abundant archaeology. In Eastern Europe, one of these sites is Mitoc-Malu Galben (Romania) with a semi-continuous loess-paleosol record from ~32 to 20 ka uncal BP. Embedded in this sequence are multiple Aurignacian and Gravettian archaeological horizons. Between 2013 and 2016 a international team re-excavated the site and focused on small excavations using high-resolution excavation and documentation methods and applied an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of the materials and their context. Here, we present our new results focusing on the lithic technology of two Aurignacinan and two Gravettian archaeological horizons. In particular, we present an Aurignacian assemblage which is securely dated to 27.8 ka uncal BP (Greenland Interstadial 5), and discuss implications of this evidence in a regional context.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Noiret, Pierre
Chirica, Vasile
Libois, Timothée
Bodi, George
Branscombe, Tansy
Murphree, William Chase
Damblon, Freddy
Haesaerts, Paul
Bosch, Marjolein
Nigst, Philip R.
author_facet Noiret, Pierre
Chirica, Vasile
Libois, Timothée
Bodi, George
Branscombe, Tansy
Murphree, William Chase
Damblon, Freddy
Haesaerts, Paul
Bosch, Marjolein
Nigst, Philip R.
author_sort Noiret, Pierre
title New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
title_short New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
title_full New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
title_fullStr New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
title_full_unstemmed New results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at Mitoc-Malu galben, Romania
title_sort new results of the 2013-2016 fieldwork at mitoc-malu galben, romania
publishDate 2018
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/224378
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source ORBi : Université de Liège
op_relation info:hdl:2268/224378
2268/224378
https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/224378
op_rights undefined
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