Mainland Southeast Asia is surrounded by Middle Pleistocene archaeology in India, South China and Indonesia, but has surprisingly little to show for itself. A survey of dispersed reports on evidence of hominin activity in mainland Southeast Asia shows how this region fits into the great arc of human dispersal from Africa to Australia. Hominin-mammal associations are an important indicator of hominin evolutionary change. Mainland Southeast Asia is identified as significant because it is a geographically intermediate zone between two different hominin populations, one to the north in China and one to the south in Java. Current hominin evidence from Middle Pleistocene sites in mainland Southeast Asia is used to evaluate three models of major h...
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that Southeast Asia was dominated by a mix of savannah, open wood...
Over 60 years ago, stone tools and remains of megafauna were discovered on the Southeast Asian islan...
Auteurs : ASTER team Georges Aumaitre, Didier Bourlès & Karim Keddadouche.International audienceThe ...
While the “Movius Line” may no longer represent a valid cultural division between Early and Middle P...
This paper examines the environmental context of human dispersals into Asia up to 0.5 mya. These dis...
Tropical Southeast Asia is a critically important region for addressing the major questions and gran...
International audienceThailand has long held a key position in South-East Asia because of its locati...
Abstract The capability of Pleistocene hominins to successfully adapt to different types of tropical...
modern humans (Homo sapiens), and the dispersal of Neolithic peoples throughout Southeast Asia and O...
In the 13 years since ‘Problems in the Stone Age of Southeast Asia’ was published, there has been a ...
Narratives of “Out of Africa 2”—the expansion of Homo sapiens across Asia—emphasize the pattern of h...
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that Southeast Asia was dominated by a mix of savannah, open wood...
Over 60 years ago, stone tools and remains of megafauna were discovered on the Southeast Asian islan...
Auteurs : ASTER team Georges Aumaitre, Didier Bourlès & Karim Keddadouche.International audienceThe ...
While the “Movius Line” may no longer represent a valid cultural division between Early and Middle P...
This paper examines the environmental context of human dispersals into Asia up to 0.5 mya. These dis...
Tropical Southeast Asia is a critically important region for addressing the major questions and gran...
International audienceThailand has long held a key position in South-East Asia because of its locati...
Abstract The capability of Pleistocene hominins to successfully adapt to different types of tropical...
modern humans (Homo sapiens), and the dispersal of Neolithic peoples throughout Southeast Asia and O...
In the 13 years since ‘Problems in the Stone Age of Southeast Asia’ was published, there has been a ...
Narratives of “Out of Africa 2”—the expansion of Homo sapiens across Asia—emphasize the pattern of h...
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that Southeast Asia was dominated by a mix of savannah, open wood...
Over 60 years ago, stone tools and remains of megafauna were discovered on the Southeast Asian islan...
Auteurs : ASTER team Georges Aumaitre, Didier Bourlès & Karim Keddadouche.International audienceThe ...