A Middle Palaeolithic burial of a modern human at Taramsa Hill, Egypt /

Discussion about a possible African origin of modern humans is hampered by the lack of Late Pleistocene skeletal material from the Nile valley, the likely passage-way from East Africa to Asia and Europe. Here we report the discovery of a burial of an anatomically modern child from southern Egypt. It...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Vermeersch, P. M., Paulissen, E. (coaut.), Peer, P. Van (coaut.), Stokes, S. (coaut.), Charlier, C. (coaut.), Stringer, C. (coaut.), Lindsay, W. (coaut.)
Formato: Analitica de revista
Lenguaje:inglés
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Sumario:Discussion about a possible African origin of modern humans is hampered by the lack of Late Pleistocene skeletal material from the Nile valley, the likely passage-way from East Africa to Asia and Europe. Here we report the discovery of a burial of an anatomically modern child from southern Egypt. Its clear relation with Middle Palaeolithic chert extraction activities and a series of OSL dates, from correlative aeolian sands, suggests an age between 49,800 and 80,400 years ago, with a mean age of 55,000.
Notas:Antiquity 72 (1999): 475Ð484