Radiocarbon sequences from some northern Mediterranean cave sites show a temporal gap between Mesolithic and Neolithic occupations. Some authors regard this as a regional phenomenon and have sought to explain it in terms of a general population decline in the late Mesolithic, which facilitated the replacement of indigenous foragers by immigrant farmers. New evidence from the rockshelter site of Mala Triglavca, in Slovenia, leads us to question this view. We describe the deposits in the rockshelter and discuss the results of AMS radiocarbon dating of bone samples recovered in excavations in the 1980s. New archaeological investi-gations and associated soil/sediment analyses show that in the central part of the rockshelter a well-defined strat...
Geoarchaeological studies based on standard sedimentological and soil micromorphological analyses we...
The paper applies Bayesian statistical modelling to radiocarbon dates obtained for a stratigraphic s...
International audienceExcavated in the 1960s, the Baume de Montclus rock shelter (Gard, France) cont...
Radiocarbon sequences from some northern Mediterranean cave sites show a temporal gap between Mesoli...
International audienceThe 1950s excavations at Châteauneuf-lès-Martigues—type site of the Late Mesol...
In this paper we present 17 new AMS dates from the Mesolithic–Early Neolithic sites of Padina and Ha...
It is often assumed that Mesolithic-Neolithic continu-ity or discontinuity of settlement relates to ...
The radioicarbon chronology of the Mesolithic and Neolithic settlement of the Balkans clearly show a...
Recent research in the Central Balkans is discovering multiple human occupations previously unknown ...
With the exception of the well known Mesolithic sites in the Danube Gorges (or the Iron Gates), the ...
With the exception of well known Mesolithic sites in the Danube Gorges, which provide ample evidence...
This paper discusses the problems with sampling materials and sampled contexts in the framework of r...
The Mesolithic–Early Neolithic radiocarbon record for the Iron Gates is compared against the regiona...
The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is the key period for our understanding of Neanderthal a...
Geoarchaeological studies based on standard sedimentological and soil micromorphological analyses we...
The paper applies Bayesian statistical modelling to radiocarbon dates obtained for a stratigraphic s...
International audienceExcavated in the 1960s, the Baume de Montclus rock shelter (Gard, France) cont...
Radiocarbon sequences from some northern Mediterranean cave sites show a temporal gap between Mesoli...
International audienceThe 1950s excavations at Châteauneuf-lès-Martigues—type site of the Late Mesol...
In this paper we present 17 new AMS dates from the Mesolithic–Early Neolithic sites of Padina and Ha...
It is often assumed that Mesolithic-Neolithic continu-ity or discontinuity of settlement relates to ...
The radioicarbon chronology of the Mesolithic and Neolithic settlement of the Balkans clearly show a...
Recent research in the Central Balkans is discovering multiple human occupations previously unknown ...
With the exception of the well known Mesolithic sites in the Danube Gorges (or the Iron Gates), the ...
With the exception of well known Mesolithic sites in the Danube Gorges, which provide ample evidence...
This paper discusses the problems with sampling materials and sampled contexts in the framework of r...
The Mesolithic–Early Neolithic radiocarbon record for the Iron Gates is compared against the regiona...
The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is the key period for our understanding of Neanderthal a...
Geoarchaeological studies based on standard sedimentological and soil micromorphological analyses we...
The paper applies Bayesian statistical modelling to radiocarbon dates obtained for a stratigraphic s...
International audienceExcavated in the 1960s, the Baume de Montclus rock shelter (Gard, France) cont...