Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of several new hominin teeth. These include a right upper deciduous canine (dc1), a right lower first deciduous molar (dm1), a right upper third premolar (P3), a right lower second molar (M2), a left lower third molar (M3), and an incomplete tooth (represented only by a single root). The teeth come from different stratigraphic layers at the site and may cover a time span of up to 200 ka. These specimens represent different tooth classes than the previously reported teeth from the same site. The current study presents metric and morphological data on the new Qesem Cave teeth as well as a discussion of their taxonomic affinities. The deciduous teeth s...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
International audienceWezmeh Cave, in the Kermanshah region of Central Western Zagros, Iran, produce...
The late Middle Palaeolithic (MP) settlement patterns in the Levant included the repeated use of cav...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
The Qesem Cave Middle Pleistocene hominin site has yielded a well preserved lower second deciduous m...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
The Middle Pleistocene represents a period of critical importance in human evolution, marked by ence...
In the African Pleistocene, the fossil evidence for early Homo sapiens populations is still relative...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
International audienceWezmeh Cave, in the Kermanshah region of Central Western Zagros, Iran, produce...
The late Middle Palaeolithic (MP) settlement patterns in the Levant included the repeated use of cav...
Ongoing fieldwork at the Middle Pleistocene site of Qesem Cave has resulted in the discovery of seve...
This study presents a description and comparative analysis of Middle Pleistocene permanent and decid...
The Mid-Pleistocene Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv in Israel yielded several hominin teeth and abundant fa...
The Qesem Cave Middle Pleistocene hominin site has yielded a well preserved lower second deciduous m...
Seven human teeth from Tabun Cave, Israel, curated at the Natural History Museum London since 1955, ...
This study presents the dental remains discovered at Manot Cave (MC), Western Galilee, Israel. The c...
The present report is a description and paleobiological analysis of human dental remains, found duri...
The Middle Pleistocene represents a period of critical importance in human evolution, marked by ence...
In the African Pleistocene, the fossil evidence for early Homo sapiens populations is still relative...
The human molar discovered in 1962 in the Middle Paleolithic levels of Me'arat Shovakh (Mugharet esh...
International audienceWezmeh Cave, in the Kermanshah region of Central Western Zagros, Iran, produce...
The late Middle Palaeolithic (MP) settlement patterns in the Levant included the repeated use of cav...