International audienceThe increase in the frequency of ochre recovered from African Middle Stone Age sites has been used, along with other discerned changes in hominid behaviour, to support the hypothesis that modern cognitive abilities gradually arose gradually in Africa, in conjunction with the biological changes that mark the origin of our species. In order to assess this hypothesis I review the earliest evidence for the use of pigmentatious material in Africa, the Near East and Europe and discuss its evolutionary significance. This review indicates that the earliest, still unresolved, use of pigments at African sites is possibly associated with archaic Homo sapiens and not with anatomically modern humans; it thus breaks the link, establ...
The emergence of the human mind is a core problem in human evolutionary studies, and many attempts h...
The use of manganese and iron oxides by late Neandertals is well documented in Europe, especially f...
International audienceGenetic, fossil, and archaeological evidence strongly support an African origi...
International audienceThe increase in the frequency of ochre recovered from African Middle Stone Age...
Within European prehistory, the issue of cultural, cognitive or behavioural modernity is an old deba...
The earliest known personal ornaments come from the Middle Stone Age of southern Africa, c. 75,000 y...
Abstract : Despite an increasing number of studies, colouring materials are still poorly understood...
This paper examines some large-scale patterns of behavioural change that are often viewed as indicat...
Les Bossats, near Ormesson, is a newly discovered late mousterian site dated around 47.000 B.P. by t...
The use of red iron‐based earth pigments, or ochre, is a key component of early symbolic behaviours ...
In the Eurasian Upper Paleotithic after about 35,000 years ago, abstract or depictional images provi...
International audienceIn the Eurasian Upper Paleolithic after about 35,000 years ago, abstract or de...
Though many European Upper Palaeolithic sites document early examples of symbolic material expressio...
Anatomically modern humans (AMHs) radiated out of Africa into the rest of the world around 60,000-50...
The available data from Central Europe is consistent with the hypothesis that Homo sapiens sapiens e...
The emergence of the human mind is a core problem in human evolutionary studies, and many attempts h...
The use of manganese and iron oxides by late Neandertals is well documented in Europe, especially f...
International audienceGenetic, fossil, and archaeological evidence strongly support an African origi...
International audienceThe increase in the frequency of ochre recovered from African Middle Stone Age...
Within European prehistory, the issue of cultural, cognitive or behavioural modernity is an old deba...
The earliest known personal ornaments come from the Middle Stone Age of southern Africa, c. 75,000 y...
Abstract : Despite an increasing number of studies, colouring materials are still poorly understood...
This paper examines some large-scale patterns of behavioural change that are often viewed as indicat...
Les Bossats, near Ormesson, is a newly discovered late mousterian site dated around 47.000 B.P. by t...
The use of red iron‐based earth pigments, or ochre, is a key component of early symbolic behaviours ...
In the Eurasian Upper Paleotithic after about 35,000 years ago, abstract or depictional images provi...
International audienceIn the Eurasian Upper Paleolithic after about 35,000 years ago, abstract or de...
Though many European Upper Palaeolithic sites document early examples of symbolic material expressio...
Anatomically modern humans (AMHs) radiated out of Africa into the rest of the world around 60,000-50...
The available data from Central Europe is consistent with the hypothesis that Homo sapiens sapiens e...
The emergence of the human mind is a core problem in human evolutionary studies, and many attempts h...
The use of manganese and iron oxides by late Neandertals is well documented in Europe, especially f...
International audienceGenetic, fossil, and archaeological evidence strongly support an African origi...