The current paper aims at describing and analysing the backed tools found in two Early Gravettian sites separated geographically from each other: Grotta Paglicci (layer 23-22) in Italy, and Kostenki 8 (layer II) in Russia. A similarity between the lithic assemblages of the two sites, and other cultural aspects, has been reported by authors over many decades. The analysis of the backed tools has created the opportunity to apply the same methodological approach to verify the resemblance and potential causes for the similarity, and also to address broader considerations on Gravettian hunting strategies and the modalities and timing of the spread of new techniques, whether related to physical movement of people or assimilation of ideas. The per...
International audienceThe site of Kostënki 21 (also known as Gmelin or Gmelinskaia) is located on th...
The Italian Gravettian remains rarely investigated, with about twenty known archaeological sites and...
This case study focuses on the debate concerning “hunting camps” (“halte de chasse”). Zooarchaeologi...
This paper describes the burial practice in the Gravettian (early Upper Paleolithic) and the Epi-Gra...
Between 30.000 and 28.000 BP, the material culture of European hunter-gatherers societies is affecte...
Hunting is commonly believed to have been one of the central aspects in the lives of Palaeolithic gr...
The Gravettian tradition appears to develop from local mousterian and different cultures at the begi...
The Gravettian is the second chrono-cultural complex of the Upper Paleolithic after the Aurignacian....
International audienceThe transition from the Aurignacian to the Gravettian witnessed important envi...
International audienceUnderstanding hunting technology is pivotal in the study of adaptive and innov...
International audienceDesign and use of a composite barbed point: 23,500- year-old direct evidence f...
peer reviewedProjectile technology and hunting have significantly shaped the evolutionary trajectory...
International audienceIn the Pyrenean Gravettian, several types of sites that vary in terms of their...
During the Upper Palaeolithic, the Aurignacian to Gravettian “transition” represents a considerable ...
This thesis examines the Mid Upper Palaeolithic (MUP) of Russia (ca. 30,000–20,000 14C BP). During t...
International audienceThe site of Kostënki 21 (also known as Gmelin or Gmelinskaia) is located on th...
The Italian Gravettian remains rarely investigated, with about twenty known archaeological sites and...
This case study focuses on the debate concerning “hunting camps” (“halte de chasse”). Zooarchaeologi...
This paper describes the burial practice in the Gravettian (early Upper Paleolithic) and the Epi-Gra...
Between 30.000 and 28.000 BP, the material culture of European hunter-gatherers societies is affecte...
Hunting is commonly believed to have been one of the central aspects in the lives of Palaeolithic gr...
The Gravettian tradition appears to develop from local mousterian and different cultures at the begi...
The Gravettian is the second chrono-cultural complex of the Upper Paleolithic after the Aurignacian....
International audienceThe transition from the Aurignacian to the Gravettian witnessed important envi...
International audienceUnderstanding hunting technology is pivotal in the study of adaptive and innov...
International audienceDesign and use of a composite barbed point: 23,500- year-old direct evidence f...
peer reviewedProjectile technology and hunting have significantly shaped the evolutionary trajectory...
International audienceIn the Pyrenean Gravettian, several types of sites that vary in terms of their...
During the Upper Palaeolithic, the Aurignacian to Gravettian “transition” represents a considerable ...
This thesis examines the Mid Upper Palaeolithic (MUP) of Russia (ca. 30,000–20,000 14C BP). During t...
International audienceThe site of Kostënki 21 (also known as Gmelin or Gmelinskaia) is located on th...
The Italian Gravettian remains rarely investigated, with about twenty known archaeological sites and...
This case study focuses on the debate concerning “hunting camps” (“halte de chasse”). Zooarchaeologi...