International audienceInvestigating the taphonomy of phytoliths at open-air archaeological sites is essential for reconstructing past land cover and assessing the plant resources available to hominins, particularly when other indicators (e.g., pollen) are scarce. Here we analyse phytolith abundance and diversity encountered in distinct ‘reservoirs’ at and around the Palaeolithic site of Attirampakkam, South India: (1) in the present-day vegetation (database of 134 species), generating on that basis a fine classification of species-specific phytolith morphotypes; (2) in the topsoil (surface); and (3) at greater soil depths above the archaeological layers (subsurface). We then compare the data to results previously obtained from the deeper un...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
This study demonstrates the application of phytolith analyses as a proxy to reconstruct vegetation h...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
International audienceInvestigating the taphonomy of phytoliths at open-air archaeological sites is ...
International audienceThe paleoecological context of hominin occupation in South Asia during the ear...
This paper presents a study of phytoliths (opal silica bodies from plants) from sediment sequences o...
Phytoliths are silica casts of plant cells, created within and between living tissues across almost ...
Phytoliths are mostly formed by groundwater silica carried upwards in a plant's vascular system and ...
Plants constitute a major economic resource for most societies yet plant-related activities are ofte...
International audienceCollateral phytolith records from four megalith cist burials uncovered at Poru...
This paper presents a review of the application of phytolith analysis to the archaeology of the Indu...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
This study demonstrates the application of phytolith analyses as a proxy to reconstruct vegetation h...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
International audienceInvestigating the taphonomy of phytoliths at open-air archaeological sites is ...
International audienceThe paleoecological context of hominin occupation in South Asia during the ear...
This paper presents a study of phytoliths (opal silica bodies from plants) from sediment sequences o...
Phytoliths are silica casts of plant cells, created within and between living tissues across almost ...
Phytoliths are mostly formed by groundwater silica carried upwards in a plant's vascular system and ...
Plants constitute a major economic resource for most societies yet plant-related activities are ofte...
International audienceCollateral phytolith records from four megalith cist burials uncovered at Poru...
This paper presents a review of the application of phytolith analysis to the archaeology of the Indu...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
This study demonstrates the application of phytolith analyses as a proxy to reconstruct vegetation h...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...