The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found during excavations conducted at Qafzeh in Lower Galilee by R. Neuville and M. Stekelis in the 1930s and, later by a team led by B. Vandermeersch during the 1960s and 1970s, never published. To this tooth sample is added an isolated tooth and a small fragment of child jaw, both found during a short season carried out under the auspices of the municipal council of Nazareth in 1996 in order to clean the site. The whole sample was unearthed from Middle Palaeolithic layers which have been previously dated to ca 90-100 ka BP, marine isotope stage 5b-c. The new human remains represent a minimum number of six adult individuals and three children. Evidenc...
International audienceObjective: The aim of this paper is to provide new insights into growth patter...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
In the prehistoric site of Ein GevI, related to the Kebaran and dated by C-14 to ca. 13.750 B.C., th...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
Studies of skeletal biology add to archaeological reconstructions by providing insights into the lif...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
In the Levant, the Middle Paleolithic (about 200-50 Ka B.P.) corresponds to a period of time that is...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
The late Middle Palaeolithic (MP) settlement patterns in the Levant included the repeated use of cav...
Excavations at the site of Kebara Cave, located in the southern part of Mount Carmel (northwestern I...
International audienceExcavations at the site of Kebara Cave, located in the southern part of Mount ...
International audienceObjective: The aim of this paper is to provide new insights into growth patter...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
In the prehistoric site of Ein GevI, related to the Kebaran and dated by C-14 to ca. 13.750 B.C., th...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
Studies of skeletal biology add to archaeological reconstructions by providing insights into the lif...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
In the Levant, the Middle Paleolithic (about 200-50 Ka B.P.) corresponds to a period of time that is...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
The late Middle Palaeolithic (MP) settlement patterns in the Levant included the repeated use of cav...
Excavations at the site of Kebara Cave, located in the southern part of Mount Carmel (northwestern I...
International audienceExcavations at the site of Kebara Cave, located in the southern part of Mount ...
International audienceObjective: The aim of this paper is to provide new insights into growth patter...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
In the prehistoric site of Ein GevI, related to the Kebaran and dated by C-14 to ca. 13.750 B.C., th...