Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22700

Title: Fluvial deposits as an archive of early human activity: Progress during the 20 years of the Fluvial Archives Group
Authors: Chauhan, Parth
Bridgland, David
Hélène-Moncel, Marie
Antoine, Pierre
Bahain, Jean-Jacques
Briant, Rebecca
Cunha, Pedro
Despriée, Jackie
Limondin-Lozouet, Nicole
Locht, Jean-Luc
Martins, Antonio A.
Schreve, Danielle
Shaw, Andrew
Voinchet, Pierre
Westaway, Rob
White, Mark J.
White, Tom
Keywords: Fluvial archives
Hominin occupation
River terraces
Lower Palaeolithic
Middle Palaeolithic
Acheulian
Levallois
Issue Date: 15-Jun-2017
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Chauhan P., et al. 2017. Fluvial deposits as an archive of early human activity: Progress during the 20 years of the Fluvial Archives Group. Quaternary Science Reviews. 166, 114 -149
Abstract: Fluvial sedimentary archives are important repositories for Lower and Middle Palaeolithic artefacts throughout the ‘Old World’, especially in Europe, where the beginning of their study coincided with the realisation that early humans were of great antiquity. Now that many river terrace sequences can be reliably dated and correlated with the globally valid marine isotope record, potentially useful patterns can be recognized in the distribution of the find-spots of the artefacts that constitute the large collections that were assembled during the years of manual gravel extraction. This paper reviews the advances during the past two decades in knowledge of hominin occupation based on artefact occurrences in fluvial contexts, in Europe, Asia and Africa. As such it is an update of a comparable review in 2007, at the end of IGCP Project no. 449, which had instigated the compilation of fluvial records from around the world during 2000–2004, under the auspices of the Fluvial Archives Group. An overarching finding is the confirmation of the well-established view that in Europe there is a demarcation between handaxe making in the west and flake–core industries in the east, although on a wider scale that pattern is undermined by the increased numbers of Lower Palaeolithic bifaces now recognized in East Asia. It is also apparent that, although it seems to have appeared at different places and at different times in the later Lower Palaeolithic, the arrival of Levallois technology as a global phenomenon was similarly timed across the area occupied by Middle Pleistocene hominins, at around 0.3 Ma.
URI: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379117302500?via%3Dihub#!
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22700
Type: article
Appears in Collections:CGE - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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