Baysal, Emma L. (Trakya author)Direkli Cave is an Epipalaeolithic site in the central Taurus mountain range in southeastern Turkey that was used by mobile hunter-gatherer communities. The assemblage of beads from the cave, made primarily from shell (marine and freshwater) and stone, shows new evidence both that bead materials were brought to the site from the shores of the Mediterranean and that the material culture of the site has relationships to the Levant, northern Mesopotamia, and inner Anatolia. This article questions how such a bead assemblage should be interpreted in the light of existing evidence for the Near Eastern and Anatolian Epipalaeolithic and what it adds to our understanding of the better known contemporary Natufian cultur...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
The PPNA site of Körtiktepe in the Upper Tigris Basin yielded one of the richest Pre-Pottery Neolith...
International audienceFifty-six pieces of obsidian from the Öküzini Cave in SW Anatolia were element...
This study explores the way in which our picture of the Levantine Epipalaeolithic has been created, ...
Identifying the movement of lithic materials to reconstruct social networks has been a mainstay of r...
This paper addresses variation in lithic raw material economy within the early Upper Paleolithic at ...
The site of Aktopraklık in northwestern Turkey was inhabited during the Late Neolithic and Early Cha...
This paper discusses the relationship between Late Epipaleolithic evidence recovered at Dederiyeh Ca...
High-resolution excavation at Tel Bet Yerah of contexts associated with large quantities of Khirbet ...
This thesis presents an analysis of a body of knapped-stone from Çatalhoyuk, the largest known Neoli...
The Epipalaeolithic and Mesolithic periods of Turkey are poorly understood. The discovery of two sit...
An understanding of the interrelationships between Levantine late Epipaleolithic chipped stone assem...
The Emiran is the earliest technocomplex within the Levantine Upper Palaeolithic sequence. It was de...
The PPNA site of Körtiktepe in the Upper Tigris Basin yielded one of the richest Pre-Pottery Neolith...
Most scientists agree that modern humans left Africa relatively recently. However, there is less agr...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
The PPNA site of Körtiktepe in the Upper Tigris Basin yielded one of the richest Pre-Pottery Neolith...
International audienceFifty-six pieces of obsidian from the Öküzini Cave in SW Anatolia were element...
This study explores the way in which our picture of the Levantine Epipalaeolithic has been created, ...
Identifying the movement of lithic materials to reconstruct social networks has been a mainstay of r...
This paper addresses variation in lithic raw material economy within the early Upper Paleolithic at ...
The site of Aktopraklık in northwestern Turkey was inhabited during the Late Neolithic and Early Cha...
This paper discusses the relationship between Late Epipaleolithic evidence recovered at Dederiyeh Ca...
High-resolution excavation at Tel Bet Yerah of contexts associated with large quantities of Khirbet ...
This thesis presents an analysis of a body of knapped-stone from Çatalhoyuk, the largest known Neoli...
The Epipalaeolithic and Mesolithic periods of Turkey are poorly understood. The discovery of two sit...
An understanding of the interrelationships between Levantine late Epipaleolithic chipped stone assem...
The Emiran is the earliest technocomplex within the Levantine Upper Palaeolithic sequence. It was de...
The PPNA site of Körtiktepe in the Upper Tigris Basin yielded one of the richest Pre-Pottery Neolith...
Most scientists agree that modern humans left Africa relatively recently. However, there is less agr...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
The PPNA site of Körtiktepe in the Upper Tigris Basin yielded one of the richest Pre-Pottery Neolith...
International audienceFifty-six pieces of obsidian from the Öküzini Cave in SW Anatolia were element...