Evidence for fire use becomes increasingly sparse the further back in time one looks. This is especially true for Palaeolithic assemblages. Primary evidence of fire use in the form of hearth features tends to give way to clusters or sparse scatters of more durable heated stone fragments. In the absence of intact fireplaces, these thermally altered lithic remains have been used as a proxy for discerning relative degrees of fire use between archaeological layers and deposits. While previous experimental studies have demonstrated the physical effects of heat on stony artefacts, the mechanisms influencing the proportion of fire proxy evidence within archaeological layers remain understudied. This fundamental study is the first to apply a comput...
International audienceWhether one is interested in paleoeconomic or technical aspects related to the...
International audienceMost of the ethnoarchaeological literature on hearths is scattered within gene...
Fire use appears to have been relatively common among Neandertals in the Middle Palaeolithic. Howeve...
Evidence for fire use becomes increasingly sparse the further back in time one looks. This is especi...
<div><p>Evidence for fire use becomes increasingly sparse the further back in time one looks. This i...
The uses and functions of fire in early human adaptations are commonly debated and at times very con...
Hearths present sedimentary features, artifacts, and direct evidence for maintained and controlled f...
International audienceA novel approach to the intensity of archaeological fires is proposed, based o...
While the use of fire has long been recognised as a crucial innovation in the cultural evolution of ...
While the use of fire has long been recognised as a crucial innovation in the cultural evolution of ...
This manuscript presents an attempt to evaluate the intensity of fire through spatial patterning and...
While it is true that the use of fire is undoubtedly an important behavioral trait, fire can also le...
Few sites with evidence for fire use are known from the Last Interglacial in Europe. Hearth features...
Everyone agrees that fire has played an important part in the history of the genus Homo. However, be...
International audienceMost of the ethnoarchaeological literature on hearths is scattered within gene...
International audienceWhether one is interested in paleoeconomic or technical aspects related to the...
International audienceMost of the ethnoarchaeological literature on hearths is scattered within gene...
Fire use appears to have been relatively common among Neandertals in the Middle Palaeolithic. Howeve...
Evidence for fire use becomes increasingly sparse the further back in time one looks. This is especi...
<div><p>Evidence for fire use becomes increasingly sparse the further back in time one looks. This i...
The uses and functions of fire in early human adaptations are commonly debated and at times very con...
Hearths present sedimentary features, artifacts, and direct evidence for maintained and controlled f...
International audienceA novel approach to the intensity of archaeological fires is proposed, based o...
While the use of fire has long been recognised as a crucial innovation in the cultural evolution of ...
While the use of fire has long been recognised as a crucial innovation in the cultural evolution of ...
This manuscript presents an attempt to evaluate the intensity of fire through spatial patterning and...
While it is true that the use of fire is undoubtedly an important behavioral trait, fire can also le...
Few sites with evidence for fire use are known from the Last Interglacial in Europe. Hearth features...
Everyone agrees that fire has played an important part in the history of the genus Homo. However, be...
International audienceMost of the ethnoarchaeological literature on hearths is scattered within gene...
International audienceWhether one is interested in paleoeconomic or technical aspects related to the...
International audienceMost of the ethnoarchaeological literature on hearths is scattered within gene...
Fire use appears to have been relatively common among Neandertals in the Middle Palaeolithic. Howeve...