Rock-pecked images from the northern Mongolian Altai attest to the presence of human communities within the high valleys of that region during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene. The material provides evidence that is hitherto largely missing from the archaeological record of that region. This paper reviews the rock art, its find sites and larger physical contexts and uses evidence from paleoenvironmental studies to propose dating and cultural significance. The material is compared with other sites said to have Paleolithic imagery from Mongolia and the adjoining Russian Altai. The body of presented material offers a major resource for the study of early hunter-gatherer communities at the interface of Central and North Asia
The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challengi...
This paper considers the question of antiquity of shamanism in Central Asia and outlines several lin...
In archaeology, the Mongolian Altai remains a poorly studied region of Asia. Since 2007, systematic ...
Rock-pecked images from the northern Mongolian Altai attest to the presence of human communities wit...
The Altai Mountains in southern Siberia are one of the prime regions for archaeological investigatio...
Despite its harsh and arid conditions, the Gobi Desert has played an important role in shaping Holoc...
This thesis presents a holistic study of connections in the Altai Mountains of the eastern Eurasian ...
The paper considers the rock burials – a special group of funerary complexes of the early Middle Age...
This paper deals with historic and proto-historic manifestations of shamanic rock art in Siberia, ma...
The Altai region has yielded a cluster of Middle and Upper Paleolithicstratified sites that have bee...
In Asia, the Initial Upper Paleolithic refers to blade-based lithic assemblages that display a speci...
In Asia, the Initial Upper Paleolithic refers to blade-based lithic assemblages that display a speci...
The Altai Mountains, situated in the middle of Asia, have been inhabited by human groups since prehi...
In Central and East Asia, the Upper Paleolithic dates as early as 45 ka cal BP, but until recently, ...
The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challengi...
This paper considers the question of antiquity of shamanism in Central Asia and outlines several lin...
In archaeology, the Mongolian Altai remains a poorly studied region of Asia. Since 2007, systematic ...
Rock-pecked images from the northern Mongolian Altai attest to the presence of human communities wit...
The Altai Mountains in southern Siberia are one of the prime regions for archaeological investigatio...
Despite its harsh and arid conditions, the Gobi Desert has played an important role in shaping Holoc...
This thesis presents a holistic study of connections in the Altai Mountains of the eastern Eurasian ...
The paper considers the rock burials – a special group of funerary complexes of the early Middle Age...
This paper deals with historic and proto-historic manifestations of shamanic rock art in Siberia, ma...
The Altai region has yielded a cluster of Middle and Upper Paleolithicstratified sites that have bee...
In Asia, the Initial Upper Paleolithic refers to blade-based lithic assemblages that display a speci...
In Asia, the Initial Upper Paleolithic refers to blade-based lithic assemblages that display a speci...
The Altai Mountains, situated in the middle of Asia, have been inhabited by human groups since prehi...
In Central and East Asia, the Upper Paleolithic dates as early as 45 ka cal BP, but until recently, ...
The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challengi...
This paper considers the question of antiquity of shamanism in Central Asia and outlines several lin...
In archaeology, the Mongolian Altai remains a poorly studied region of Asia. Since 2007, systematic ...