This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The cave contains evidence for human occupation during the Early Upper Paleolithic period (46–33 ka) mainly of Early Ahmarian (∼46–42 ka) and Levantine Aurignacian (∼38–34 ka) cultural levels. Six teeth (three deciduous and three permanent) were found at the site, of which four could be thoroughly analyzed. The morphology of the teeth was qualitatively described and analyzed using traditional and geometric morphometric methods. A large comparative sample was used in order to assess the morphological affiliation of the Manot specimens with other Homo groups. The results provided equivocal signals: the upper first premolar (MC-9 P3) is probably mode...
The timing of archeological industries in the Levant is central for understanding the spread of mode...
The Upper Palaeolithic of the Levant (45 000–22 000 BP) represents the full establishment of modern ...
The site of Fumane Cave (western Lessini Mountains, Italy) contains a stratigraphic sequence spannin...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
A key event in human evolution is the expansion of modern humans of African origin across Eurasia be...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
Three deciduous tooth crowns were found in Unit 18B in El Castillo Cave (Spain), considered a transi...
The Qesem Cave Middle Pleistocene hominin site has yielded a well preserved lower second deciduous m...
<div><p>One of the central questions of the transition from mobile hunter-gatherers to sedentary far...
The timing of archeological industries in the Levant is central for understanding the spread of mode...
The Upper Palaeolithic of the Levant (45 000–22 000 BP) represents the full establishment of modern ...
The site of Fumane Cave (western Lessini Mountains, Italy) contains a stratigraphic sequence spannin...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
A key event in human evolution is the expansion of modern humans of African origin across Eurasia be...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
Three deciduous tooth crowns were found in Unit 18B in El Castillo Cave (Spain), considered a transi...
The Qesem Cave Middle Pleistocene hominin site has yielded a well preserved lower second deciduous m...
<div><p>One of the central questions of the transition from mobile hunter-gatherers to sedentary far...
The timing of archeological industries in the Levant is central for understanding the spread of mode...
The Upper Palaeolithic of the Levant (45 000–22 000 BP) represents the full establishment of modern ...
The site of Fumane Cave (western Lessini Mountains, Italy) contains a stratigraphic sequence spannin...