Middle pleistocene adaptations in Central Europe |
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Authors: | Jiří Svoboda |
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Institution: | (1) Institute of Archaeology, Czechoslovakian Academy of Sciences, sady Osvobození 17-19, 662 03 Brno, Czechoslovakia |
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Abstract: | The biological evolution documented in the fossil and archaeological record of Central Europe between about 700,000 and 100,000 years ago reflects the transition fromHomo erectus to the earliestHomo sapiens. These populations created different types of industries, ranging from assemblages of small artifacts and industries with simple pebble tools to standardized units such as the Evolved Acheulean and the Early Mousterian. The industries of the Last Interglacial (Taubachian) show some regression in technological standardization and a reappearance of small artifacts. Other aspects of cultural adaptation (settlements, dwellings, hunting activity, symbolic and aesthetic expressions) are also summarized. It is suggested that the impact of climate and climatic changes on human settlement and behavior was greater in Central Europe (where two glaciations advanced from both north and south) than in the Mediterranean and Western Europe. The general trend of cultural veolution was toward greater technological and social complexity, but its course was not unilinear. |
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Keywords: | Middle Pleistocene Lower Paleolithic Central Europe adaptation dwellings hunting |
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