This paper describes an alternative biface reduction strategy, the unifacial biface, and its implications for prehistoric stone tool studies and replicative experiments
Lower Palaeolithic stone tools: a techno-functional study on flakes from bifacial shaping at Soucy 3...
For the past decade, debates on the earliest evidence of bifacial shaping in Western Europe have foc...
This dissertation presents a model of biface reduction to account for variability in Acheulian bifac...
While Late Middle Palaeolithic industries are characterized by a well-documented diversity of stone ...
Bifacial chipped stones have been used by archaeologists to document the evolution of human technolo...
The word “Acheulean” was introduced in the literature in the 19th century by Gabriel de Mortillet1 ...
A new look and an original methodolgy for assessing handaxe type bu concentrating only on the points...
A peculiar stone with the shape of a heart caught the attention of a young girl in 1916. Her father ...
The relative amount of retouch on stone tools is central to many archaeological studies linking ston...
The Río Negro is the most important inner fluvial course of the Uruguay Republic. Along its basin, t...
International audienceFour shaping biface experiments, using various hammers, allow us to revisit th...
Acheulean bifaces dominate the archaeological record for 1.5 million years. The meaning behind the o...
Sometimes, in Middle Palaeolithic sites, there are some handaxes yet. These tools are seen like an a...
North American lithic analysis often assigns biface preforms to discrete, successive stages defined ...
International audienceFor the past decade, debates on the earliest evidence of bifacial shaping in W...
Lower Palaeolithic stone tools: a techno-functional study on flakes from bifacial shaping at Soucy 3...
For the past decade, debates on the earliest evidence of bifacial shaping in Western Europe have foc...
This dissertation presents a model of biface reduction to account for variability in Acheulian bifac...
While Late Middle Palaeolithic industries are characterized by a well-documented diversity of stone ...
Bifacial chipped stones have been used by archaeologists to document the evolution of human technolo...
The word “Acheulean” was introduced in the literature in the 19th century by Gabriel de Mortillet1 ...
A new look and an original methodolgy for assessing handaxe type bu concentrating only on the points...
A peculiar stone with the shape of a heart caught the attention of a young girl in 1916. Her father ...
The relative amount of retouch on stone tools is central to many archaeological studies linking ston...
The Río Negro is the most important inner fluvial course of the Uruguay Republic. Along its basin, t...
International audienceFour shaping biface experiments, using various hammers, allow us to revisit th...
Acheulean bifaces dominate the archaeological record for 1.5 million years. The meaning behind the o...
Sometimes, in Middle Palaeolithic sites, there are some handaxes yet. These tools are seen like an a...
North American lithic analysis often assigns biface preforms to discrete, successive stages defined ...
International audienceFor the past decade, debates on the earliest evidence of bifacial shaping in W...
Lower Palaeolithic stone tools: a techno-functional study on flakes from bifacial shaping at Soucy 3...
For the past decade, debates on the earliest evidence of bifacial shaping in Western Europe have foc...
This dissertation presents a model of biface reduction to account for variability in Acheulian bifac...