Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia

Quaternary and geoarchaeology studies from the eastern limits of the Ural Mountains provide multiple lines of evidence of the Palaeolithic peopling of this geographically marginal and still poorly explored territory of western Siberia following the mid-last glacial (MIS 3) warming. A complex of inve...

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Main Authors: Chlachula, Jiří, Serikov, Yuriy B.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://publikace.k.utb.cz/handle/10563/1002158
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spelling ftunivzlinpubl:oai:publikace.k.utb.cz:10563/1002158 2023-07-16T04:01:10+02:00 Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia Chlachula, Jiří Serikov, Yuriy B. 2011 http://publikace.k.utb.cz/handle/10563/1002158 en eng Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2010.00166.x/abstract Boreas http://publikace.k.utb.cz/handle/10563/1002158 Boreas article 2011 ftunivzlinpubl 2023-06-25T07:40:02Z Quaternary and geoarchaeology studies from the eastern limits of the Ural Mountains provide multiple lines of evidence of the Palaeolithic peopling of this geographically marginal and still poorly explored territory of western Siberia following the mid-last glacial (MIS 3) warming. A complex of investigated open-air localities in the Sosva River basin (the north-central Trans-Ural area) at the periphery of the western Siberian Plain, distinguished by very high concentrations of Pleistocene megafaunal remains previously regarded as 'mammoth cemeteries', indicate, in conjunction with the associated diagnostic ivory/bone and stone industry, open occupation sites during the Last Glacial (MIS 2). Fossil faunal remains, dominated by mammoth (98%) together with bird and fish species, indicate various methods of exploitation of the Late Pleistocene natural resources and successful behavioural adaptation to the last glacial sub-polar tundra-steppe environment. The taphonomy and composition of the well-preserved skeletal remains from the main occupation sites suggest both active hunting and anthropogenic 'scavenging' practices. The contextual geology and the cultural and biotic multi-proxy records from the Trans-Ural Upper Palaeolithic Complex provide new insights into the timing and palaeoecological conditions of the Pleistocene human occupation of north-central Asia. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra ural mountains Siberia Tomas Bata University Zlin: TBU publications
institution Open Polar
collection Tomas Bata University Zlin: TBU publications
op_collection_id ftunivzlinpubl
language English
description Quaternary and geoarchaeology studies from the eastern limits of the Ural Mountains provide multiple lines of evidence of the Palaeolithic peopling of this geographically marginal and still poorly explored territory of western Siberia following the mid-last glacial (MIS 3) warming. A complex of investigated open-air localities in the Sosva River basin (the north-central Trans-Ural area) at the periphery of the western Siberian Plain, distinguished by very high concentrations of Pleistocene megafaunal remains previously regarded as 'mammoth cemeteries', indicate, in conjunction with the associated diagnostic ivory/bone and stone industry, open occupation sites during the Last Glacial (MIS 2). Fossil faunal remains, dominated by mammoth (98%) together with bird and fish species, indicate various methods of exploitation of the Late Pleistocene natural resources and successful behavioural adaptation to the last glacial sub-polar tundra-steppe environment. The taphonomy and composition of the well-preserved skeletal remains from the main occupation sites suggest both active hunting and anthropogenic 'scavenging' practices. The contextual geology and the cultural and biotic multi-proxy records from the Trans-Ural Upper Palaeolithic Complex provide new insights into the timing and palaeoecological conditions of the Pleistocene human occupation of north-central Asia.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Chlachula, Jiří
Serikov, Yuriy B.
spellingShingle Chlachula, Jiří
Serikov, Yuriy B.
Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
author_facet Chlachula, Jiří
Serikov, Yuriy B.
author_sort Chlachula, Jiří
title Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
title_short Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
title_full Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
title_fullStr Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
title_full_unstemmed Last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the Central Trans-Ural area: the Sosva River Upper Palaeolithic Complex, western Siberia
title_sort last glacial ecology and geoarchaeology of the central trans-ural area: the sosva river upper palaeolithic complex, western siberia
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc
publishDate 2011
url http://publikace.k.utb.cz/handle/10563/1002158
genre Tundra
ural mountains
Siberia
genre_facet Tundra
ural mountains
Siberia
op_source Boreas
op_relation http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2010.00166.x/abstract
Boreas
http://publikace.k.utb.cz/handle/10563/1002158
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