viernes, 28 de julio de 2017

Titulares 28-7-17


Evento. Diputación de Bizkaia conmemora los 101 años del descubrimiento de las pinturas rupestres de Santimamiñe

Nuevos hallazgos en Orce revelan que la complejidad cultural de los homínidos de hace 1,4 millones de años es mayor de lo que se creía

Las invasiones de la Edad de Bronce casi no afectaron a la Península Bronze Age Iberia received fewer steppe invaders than the rest of Europe

Descubren otros 9 petroglifos junto a los grabados de barcos únicos en Europa de Oia - Faro de Vigo 

Una ventana al pasado de Los Millares desde el móvil | Novapolis

Audio. Yacimiento de Los Millares - Noches de verano - RTVE.es A la Carta 
Cerramos este programa de miercoles hablando de ciudades olvidadas, concretamente del yacimiento prehistórico de Los Millares, con nuestra colaboradora, Elena del Pecho, y el jefe de Conservación e Investigación del Museo de Almería, Manuel Ramos Lizana.

El yacimiento de Cabezo Redondo tendrá un centro de interpretación - Informacion.es

Evento. Viaje al pasado en Salas en el túmulo de La Cobertoria - La Nueva España  / Link 2

Michael Walker adelanta que en esta Campaña se esperan interesantes descubrimientos - murcia.com

Vídeo. ARQUEOMANÍA EN LA CUEVA DE LA PILETA 2
Ver en PaleoVídeos L.R.3 nº 21.

Residuos de hace 4.000 años en un recipiente de madera descubierto en los Alpes / Unique wheat discovery in Bronze Age lunch box

Los primeros pobladores de México estuvieron en Sonora / Link 2


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More excavations at Vanguard could reveal new Neanderthal evidence – Gibraltar Chronicle

Forging relationships: Identifying prehistoric social network dynamics with modern algorithms — University of Cambridge
Published in the Journal of Complex Networks, this pioneering application of modularity analyses focuses on copper exchange networks in the Balkans c. 6200 BC to 3200 BC.
In the first ever archaeological study of its kind, two researchers have combined the chemical analyses of dozens of the world’s earliest copper artefacts and modularity approach in order to identify prehistoric networks of co-operation during the early development of European metalmaking. This study has led them one step further: the communities that co-operated the most largely belonged to the same archaeological culture, thus revealing a novel method for an independent evaluation of the archaeological record...

Scientists Find Traces of Adaptation and Cultural Diversification Among Early North American Stone Tools | Newsdesk newsdesk.si.edu  / Link 2
Innovative 3-D Analysis of Projectile Points in Museum Collections Yield Insights Into Changing Hunter-Gatherer Social Interactions 12,500 Years Ago
Using new methods to analyze stone projectile points crafted by North America’s earliest human inhabitants, Smithsonian scientists have found that these tools show evidence of a shift toward more experimentation in their production beginning about 12,500 years ago, following hundreds of years of consistent stone-tool production created using uniform techniques. The findings provide clues into changes in social interactions during a time when people are thought to have been spreading into new parts of North America and adapting to different environments, beginning a period of cultural diversification...

Cultural flexibility was key for early humans to survive extreme dry periods in southern Africa - Wits University  / Paper
Early human's ability to survive through prolonged arid areas in southern Africa developed from their ability to innovate and adapt.
The flexibility and ability to adapt to changing climates by employing various cultural innovations allowed communities of early humans to survive through a prolonged period of pronounced aridification.
 The early human techno-tradition, known as Howiesons Poort (HP), associated with Homo sapiens who lived in southern Africa about 66 000 to 59 000 years ago indicates that during this period of pronounced aridification they developed cultural innovations that allowed them to significantly enlarge the range of environments they occupied...

Archaeology shows there's more to millet than birdseed | University of Cambridge
Archaeological research shows that our prehistoric ancestors built resilience into their food supply. Now archaeologists say ‘forgotten’ millet – a cereal familiar today as birdseed – has a role to play in modern crop diversity and in helping to feed the world’s population...

Unraveling the Mystery of the "Armenian Stonehenge" | Travel | Smithsonian 


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