BAR S1244 2004:
'Out of Africa'. An investigation into the earliest occupation of the Old World.
By Marco Langbroek. ISBN 1841716049. £28.00. 128 pages; 14 figures, plates, maps, drawings; 1 appendix
Published in the BAR International Series by Archaeopress, Oxford, 2004
Based on my Ph.D. dissertation, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University, 2003.
Synopsis:
In this work, the author aims to arrive at a meaningful frame of
reference for the earliest occupation of Eurasia. The basis for this endeavour,
and the subject of the first part of this study, is a solid chronology of
occupation founded on a critical assessment of the evidence. This chronology is
then compared to that of various events in and aspects of the evolution of
global and regional climates and ecologies, as well as various events in and
aspects of hominin evolution itself. Archaeological and biological clues to
changing behaviour in Africa and Eurasia over the timespan of 2.5-0.3 Ma are
assessed against the background of changing climate and environments in the
second part of this work. These form the background against which an attempt is
made to provide a context of behavioural and cognitive evolution leading to
these earliest colonizations. The primary goal of this discussion of the
earliest occupation of Eurasia therefore is not to present the earliest dates
with as many dots as possible in remote corners of the World map: the primary
goal is to understand how, because of which factors of change, these dots
appeared.
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