Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T09:08:16.051Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

3.3 - The Upper Palaeolithic and Earlier Epi-Palaeolithic of Western Asia

from VII. - Western and Central Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Anna Belfer-Cohen
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Nigel Goring-Morris
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Colin Renfrew
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Introduction

The Near (or Middle) East is an ambiguous term that refers to Southwest Asia eastwards from the Mediterranean up to and including Iran. The region encompasses Anatolia, the Levant, Cyprus, Mesopotamia, Arabia and, sometimes, Transcaucasia. Prehistoric research throughout the region has been patchy, with a notable historical bias on the Levant (as an offshoot from “biblical” archaeology); this encompasses the area bounded between the Taurus/Zagros and the Red Sea on the one hand, and the Mediterranean and the Arabian Desert on the other. Relatively little research was conducted throughout much of Anatolia or Iran, although this has begun to change in recent years. Within the Arabian Peninsula, Late/Terminal Pleistocene research is almost nonexistent.

Pioneering prehistoric research in the Near East was Eurocentric in outlook, as demonstrated by the initial unilinear six-stage model proposed for the Upper Palaeolithic of the Levant by Neuville (1934) and modified by Garrod (1951). While their model was based on cave and rock shelter sequences in Mount Carmel and the Judean Desert, the nomenclature used was originally European, as were the criteria for defining the various local entities through the sequence. Indeed, even much later, changes and variants observed in the local archaeological record often continued to be measured against the European “yardstick” (e.g., Bordes 1977).

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adler, D. S. & Bar-Oz, G. 2009. Seasonal patterns of prey acquisition during the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic of the southern Caucasus, pp. 127–40 in (J. J. Hublin & M. P. Richards, eds.) The Evolution of Hominid Diets: Integrating Approaches to the Study of Palaeolithic Subsistence. Springer: Dordrecht.
Adler, D. S., Bar-Yosef, O., Belfer-Cohen, A., Tushabramishvili, N., Boaretto, E., Mercier, N., Valladas, H. & Rink, W. J. 2008. Dating the demise: Neandertal extinction and the establishment of modern humans in the southern Caucasus. Journal of Human Evolution 55: 817–33.Google Scholar
Almogi-Labin, A., Bar-Matthews, M. & Ayalon, A. 2004. Climate variability in the Levant and Northeast Africa during the late Quaternary based on marine and land records, pp. 117–34 in (Goren-Inbar, N. & Speth, J. D., eds.) Human Paleoecology in the Levantine Corridor. Oxbow: Oxford.
Arensburg, B. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1973. Human remains from Ein Gev I, Jordan Valley, Israel. Paléorient 1: 201–6.Google Scholar
Atiçi, A. L. & Stutz, A. J. 2002. Mortality profile analysis of the ungulate fauna from Öküzini: a preliminary reconstruction of site use, seasonality and mobility patterns, pp. 101–8 in (Yalçinkaya, M. O., Kozlowski, J. & Yosef, O. Bar, eds.) La Grotte d’Öküzini: Evolution du Paléolithique Final du Sud-Ouest de l’Anatolie. ERAUL: Liège.
Azoury, I. 1986. Ksar Akil, Lebanon. A Technological and Typological Analysis of the Transitional and Early Upper Palaeolithic Levels of Ksar Akil and Abu Halka. BAR International Series 289: Oxford.
Bachdach, J. 1982. Das Jungpaläolithikum von Jabrud in Syrien. Ph.D. thesis, University of Cologne.
Baird, D. 2006. The history of settlement and social landscapes in the Early Holocene in the Çatalhöyük area, pp. 55–74 in (Hodder, I., ed.) Çatalhöyük Perspectives: Reports from the 1995–99 Seasons. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: Cambridge & London, and The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara.
Bar-Matthews, M. & Ayalon, A. 2003. Climatic conditions in the Eastern Mediterranean during the Last Glacial (60–10 ky bp) and their relations to the Upper Palaeolithic in the Levant: oxygen and carbon isotope systematics of cave deposits, pp. 13–18 in (Belfer-Cohen, A. N. & Goring-Morris, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Bar-Oz, G. 2005. Epipalaeolithic Subsistence Strategies in the Levant: A Zooarchaeological Perspective. American School of Prehistoric Research (ASPR) Monograph Series: Brill Academic Publishers: Boston.
Bar-Oz, G., Belfer-Cohen, A., Mesheviliani, T., Jakeli, N. & Bar-Yosef, O. 2008. Taphonomy and zooarchaeology of the Upper Palaeolithic cave of Dzudzuana, Republic of Georgia. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 18: 131–51.Google Scholar
Bartov, Y., Goldstein, S. L., Stein, M. & Enzel, Y. 2003. Catastrophic arid episodes in the Eastern Mediterranean linked with the North Atlantic Heinrich events. Geology 31: 439–42.Google Scholar
Baruch, U. & Bottema, S. 1999. A new pollen diagram from Lake Hula: vegetational, climatic, and anthropogenic implications, pp. 75–86 in (Kawanabe, H., Coulter, G. W. & Roosevelt, A. C., eds.) Ancient Lakes: Their Cultural and Biological Diversity. Kenobi Productions: Brussels.
Bar-Yosef, O. 1970. The Epi-Palaeolithic Cultures of Palestine. Ph.D. thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Bar-Yosef, O. 1987. Direct and indirect evidence for hafting in the Epi-palaeolithic and Neolithic of the southern Levant, pp. 155–64 in (Stordeur, D., ed.) La Main et emmanchements Prehistoriques. Maison de l’Orient: Lyon.
Bar-Yosef, O. 1991. Stone tools and social context in Levantine prehistory, pp. 371–95 in (Clark, G. A., ed.) Perspectives on the Past: Theoretical Biases on Mediterranean Hunter-Gatherer Research. University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia.
Bar-Yosef, O. 2000. The Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic in southwest Asia and neighbouring regions, pp. 107–56 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Pilbeam, D., eds.) The Geography of Neandertals and Modern Humans in Europe and the Greater Mediterranean. Peabody Museum, Harvard University: Cambridge, MA.
Bar-Yosef, O. 2007. The dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia – a cultural interpretation, pp. 207–18 in (Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. & Stringer, C. B., eds.) Rethinking the Human Revolution. McDonald Institute Monographs, University of Cambridge: Cambridge.
Bar-Yosef, O., Arnold, M., Mercier, N., Belfer-Cohen, A., Goldberg, P., Housley, R., Laville, H., Meignen, L., Vogel, J. C. & Vandermeersch, B. 1996. The dating of the Upper Palaeolithic layers in Kebara Cave, Mt. Carmel. Journal of Archaeological Science 23: 297–306.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 2004. The Qafzeh Upper Paleolithic assemblages: 70 years later. Eurasian Prehistory 2: 145–80.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Kuhn, S. L. 1999. The big deal about blades: laminar technologies and human evolution. American Anthropologist 101/2: 322–38.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Phillips, J. L. (eds.) 1977. Prehistoric Investigations in Gebel Maghara, Northern Sinai. Qedem 7 – Monographs of the Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University: Jerusalem.
Bar-Yosef, O. & Vogel, J. 1987. Relative and absolute chronology of the Epi-Palaeolithic in the southern Levant, pp. 220–45 in (Aurenche, O., Evin, J. & Hours, F., eds.) Chronologies in the Near East. BAR International Series 379: Oxford.
Bar-Yosef Mayer, D. E. 2005. The exploitation of shells as beads in the Palaeolithic and Neolithic of the Levant. Paléorient 31: 176–85.Google Scholar
Becker, M. S. 2003. Spatial patterning in the Upper Palaeolithic: a perspective from the Abu Noshra sites, pp. 134–50 in (Belfer-Cohen, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1981. The Aurignacian in Hayonim Cave. Paleorient 7: 19–42.Google Scholar
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1999. The Levantine Aurignacian: 60 years of research, pp. 118–34 in (Davies, W. & Charles, R., eds.) Dorothy Garrod and the Progress of the Palaeolithic. Oxbow: Oxford.
Belfer-Cohen, A., Davidzon, A., Goring-Morris, A. N., Lieberman, D. & Spears, M. 2004. Nahal Ein Gev I: A Late Upper Palaeolithic site by the Sea of Galilee, Israel. Paléorient 30: 25–46.Google Scholar
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N. 1986. Har Horesha I: An Upper Palaeolithic Site in the Central Negev Highlands. Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society – Mitekufat Haeven 19: 43*–57*.Google Scholar
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N. 2002. Why microliths? Microlithization in the Levant, pp. 57–68 in (Elston, R. G. & Kuhn, S. L., eds.) Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithic Technologies, vol. AP3A 12. Archeology Papers of the American Anthropological Association: Arlington, VA.
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N. 2007. From the beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic cultural continuity, pp. 199–206 in (Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. & Stringer, C. B., eds.) Rethinking the Human Revolution. McDonald Institute Monographs, University of Cambridge: Cambridge.
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N. 2009. The shift from the Middle Palaeolithic to the Upper Palaeolithic: Levantine perspectives, pp. 89–100 in (Camps, M. & Szmidt, C., eds.) The Mediterranean from 50,000 to 25,000 bp: Turning Points and New Directions. Oxbow: Oxford.
Belfer-Cohen, A. & Grosman, L. 2007. Tools or cores? Carinated artifacts in Levantine Late Upper Paleolithic assemblages and why does it matter, pp. 143–63 in (McPherron, S. P., ed.) Tools versus Cores Alternative Approaches to Stone Tool Analysis. Cambridge Scholars Publishing: Cambridge.
Bergman, C. A. 1987. Ksar Akil, Lebanon. A Technological and Typological Analysis of the Later Palaeolithic Levels of Ksar Akil, vol. II. Levels XIII–VI. BAR International Series 329: Oxford.
Bergman, C. A. & Stringer, C. B. 1989. Fifty years after: Egbert, an Upper Palaeolithic juvenile from Ksar Akil, Lebanon. Paléorient 15: 99–111.Google Scholar
Berillon, G., Asgari Khaneghah, A., Antoine, P., Bahain, J.-J., Chevrier, B., Zeitoun, V., Aminzadeh, N., Beheshti, M., Ebadollahi Chanzangh, H. & Nochadi, S. 2007. Discovery of new open-air Paleolithic localities in Central Alborz, Northern Iran. Journal of Human Evolution 52: 380–7.Google Scholar
Boëda, E. & Muhesen, S. 1993. Umm el Tlel (el Kowm, Syrie): Etude préliminaire des industries lithiques du Paléolithique Moyen et Supérieur 1991–1992. Cahiers de l’Euphrate 7: 47–91.Google Scholar
Bon, F. 2002. L’Aurignacien entre mer et océan: réflexion sur l’unité des phases anciennes de l’Aurignacien dans le sud de la France. Société Préhistorique Française: Paris.
Bordes, F. 1977. Que sont le Pré-Aurignacien et le Yabrudien?, pp. 49*–55* in (O. Bar-Yosef, ed.) Eretz-Israel 13. Israel Exploration Society: Jerusalem.
Bordes, J.-G. & Shidrang, S. 2005. Le Paléolithique Supérieur du Zagros: sites de la région de Kermanshah et de Khorramabad (Yafteh), pp. 116–36 in (J. Jaubert & F. Biglari, eds.) Le Paléolithique d’Iran. BAR International Series 1968: Oxford.
Bottema, S. & van Zeist, W. 1981. Palynological evidence for the climatic history of the Near East, 50,000–6000 b.p., pp. 115–45 in (J. Cauvin and P. Sanlaville, eds.), Préhistoire du Levant: Chronologie et l’Organisation de l’Espace Depuis les Origines Jusqu’au VIe millénaire, Association Paléorient, CNRS: Paris.
Bourguignon, L. 1998. Les Industries du Paléolithique Intermédiaire d’Umm el Tlel. Nouveaux eléments pour le passage entre Paléolithique Moyen et Supérieur dans le Bassin d’El Khowm, pp. 709–30 in (M. Otte, ed.) Préhistoire d’Anatolie. Genèse de Deux Mondes. ERAUL 85: Liège.
Byrd, B. F. 1994. Late Quaternary hunter-gatherer complexes in the Levant between 20,000 and 10,000 bp, pp. 205–66 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Kra, R. S., eds.) Late Quaternary Chronology and Paleoclimates of the Eastern Mediterranean. Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona: Tucson.
Byrd, B. F. 1998. Spanning the gap from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Natufian: the Early and Middle Epipaleolithic, pp. 64–82 in (Henry, D. O., ed.) The Prehistoric Archaeology of Jordan. BAR International Series 705: Oxford.
Chevrier, B., Berillon, G., Asgari Khaneghah, A., Antoine, P., Bahain, J.-J. & Zeitoun, V. 2006. Moghanak, Otchounak, Garm Roud 2 : nouveaux assemblages paléolithiques dans le Nord de l’Iran. Caractérisations typo-technologiques et attributions chrono-culturelles. Paléorient 32: 59–79.Google Scholar
Clark, G. A. (ed.) 1991. Perspectives on the Past: Theoretical Biases on Mediterranean Hunter-Gatherer Research. University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia.
Clark, G. A. & Lindly, M. 1991. On paradigmatic biases and Paleolithic research tradition. Current Anthropology 32: 577–86.Google Scholar
Clark, G. A. & Riel-Salvatore, J. 2009. What’s in a name? Observations on the compositional integrity of the Aurignacian, pp. 323–38 in (Camps, M. & Szmidt, C., eds.) The Mediterranean from 50,000 to 25,000 bp: Turning Points and New Directions. Oxbow: Oxford.
Coinman, N. 1997. Worked bone in the Levantine Upper Paleolithic: rare examples from the Wadi al-Hasa, west-central Jordan. Paléorient 22: 121–31.Google Scholar
Conard, N. J. & Bolus, M. 2003. Radiocarbon dating the appearance of modern humans and timing of cultural innovations in Europe: new results and new challenges. Journal of Human Evolution 44: 331–71.Google Scholar
Coon, C. S. 1951. Cave Exploration in Iran, 1949. University Museum: Philadelphia.
Copeland, L. 1975. The Middle and Upper Paleolithic of Lebanon and Syria in the light of recent research, pp. 317–50 in (Wendorf, F. & Marks, A. E., eds.) Problems in Prehistory: North Africa and the Levant. Southern Methodist University Press: Dallas.
Copeland, L. 2001. Forty-six Emireh points from the Lebanon in the context of the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition in the Levant. Paléorient 26: 73–92.Google Scholar
Davidzon, A. & Goring-Morris, A. N. 2003. Sealed in stone: the Upper Palaeolithic Early Ahmarian knapping method in the light of refitting studies at Nahal Nizzana XIII, Western Negev, Israel. Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society – Mitekufat Haeven 33: 75–206.Google Scholar
Davis, S. J. M. 1982. Climate change and the advent of domestication: the succession of ruminant artiodactyls in the Late Pleistocene-Holocene Period in the Israel region. Paléorient 8: 5–15.Google Scholar
Enzel, Y., Amit, R., Dayan, U., Crouvi, O., Kahana, R., Ziv, B. & Sharon, D. 2008. The climatic and physiographic controls of the Eastern Mediterranean over the Late Pleistocene climates in the southern Levant and its neighboring deserts. Global and Planetary Change 60: 165–92.Google Scholar
Ferring, C. R. 1988. Technological change in the Upper Paleolithic of the Negev, pp. 333–48 in (Dibble, H. & Montet-White, A., eds.) Upper Pleistocene Prehistory of Western Eurasia, vol. 54. University Museum Monographs. University of Pennsylvania: Philadelphia.
Fox, J. R. 2003. The Tor Sadaf lithic assemblage: a technological study of the earliest Levantine Upper Palaeolithic in the Wadi al-Hasa, pp. 80–94 in (A. N. Goring-Morris and A. Belfer-Cohen, eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Frumkin, A., Ford, D. C. & Schwarcz, H. P. 1999. Continental oxygen isotope record in the last 170,000 years in Jerusalem. Quaternary Research 51: 317–27.Google Scholar
Garrard, A. N. 1982. The environmental implications of a reanalysis of the large mammal fauna from the Wadi el-Mughara caves, Palestine, pp. 165–87 in (Bintliff, J. & Zeist, W. V., eds.) Paleoclimates, Paleoenvironments and Human Communities in the Eastern Mediterranean Region in Later Prehistory. BAR International Series 133: Oxford.
Garrard, A. N. 1998. Environment and cultural adaptations in the Azraq Basin: 24,000–7,000 bp, pp. 139–48 in (Henry, D. O., ed.) The Prehistoric Archaeology of Jordan. BAR International Series 705: Oxford.
Garrard, A. N., Baird, D. & Byrd, B. F. 1994. The chronological basis and significance of the Late Palaeolithic and Neolithic sequence in the Azraq Basin, Jordan, pp. 177–99 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Kra, R., eds.) Late Quaternary Chronology and Paleoclimates of the Eastern Mediterranean. Radiocarbon: Tucson.
Garrard, A. N. & Byrd, B. 1992. New dimensions to the Epipalaeolithic of the Wadi Jilat in central Jordan. Paléorient 18: 47–62.Google Scholar
Garrard, A. N. & Gebel, H. G. (eds.) 1988. The Prehistory of Jordan. The State of Research in 1986. BAR International Series 396: Oxford.
Garrard, A. & Yazbeck, C. 2003. Qadisha Valley prehistory project (northern Lebanon): summary of first two seasons’ investigations. Baal 7: 7–14.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. 1930. The Palaeolithic of southern Kurdistan: excavations in the caves of Zarzi and Hazar Merd. Bulletin of the American School of Prehistoric Research 6: 8–43.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. 1951. A transitional industry from the base of the Upper Palaeolithic in Palestine and Syria. The Royal Anthropological Society of Great Britain and Ireland 82: 121–32.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. 1953. The relations between Southwest Asia and Europe in the later Palaeolithic age. Journal of World History 1: 13–38.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. 1955. The Mugharet el-Emireh in Lower Galilee: type station of the Emiran industry. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 55: 141–62.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. 1957. Notes sur le Paléolithique Supérieur du Moyen Orient. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 55: 239–445.Google Scholar
Garrod, D. A. E. & Bate, D. M. A. 1937. The Stone Age of Mount Carmel, vol. 1. Clarendon Press: Oxford.
Gilead, I. 1981. Upper Palaeolithic tool assemblages from the Negev and Sinai, pp. 331–42 in (Sanlaville, P. & Cauvin, J., eds.) Préhistoire du Levant. CNRS: Paris.
Gilead, I. 1991. The Upper Paleolithic Period in the Levant. Journal of World Prehistory 5: 105–54.Google Scholar
Gilead, I. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1993. Early Upper Paleolithic sites in the Kadesh Barnea area, northeastern Sinai. Journal of Field Archaeology 20: 265–80.Google Scholar
Goldberg, P. 1986. Late Quaternary environmental history of the Southern Levant. Geoarchaeology 1: 225–44.Google Scholar
Golovanova, L. V., Cleghorn, N. E., Doronichev, V. B., Hoffecker, J. F., Burr, G. S. & Sulergizkiy, L. D. 2006. The Early Upper Paleolithic in the Northern Caucasus (new data from Mezmaiskaya Cave, 1997 excavation). Eurasian Prehistory 4: 43–78.Google Scholar
González Echegaray, J. 1978. Notes toward a systematization of the Upper Palaeolithic in Palestine, pp. 177–91 in (Freeman, L. G., ed.) Views of the Past: Essays in the Old World and Palaeoanthropology. Mouton: The Hague.
Goring-Morris, A. N. 1980. Upper Palaeolithic sites from Wadi Fazael, Lower Jordan Valley. Paléorient 6: 173–91.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A. N. 1987. At the Edge: Terminal Pleistocene Hunter-Gatherers in the Negev and Sinai. BAR International Series 361: Oxford.
Goring-Morris, A. N. 1988. Trends in the spatial organization of Terminal Pleistocene hunter-gatherer occupations as viewed from the Negev and Sinai. Paléorient 14: 231–43.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A. N. 1995. Complex hunter-gatherers at the end of the Paleolithic (20,000–10,000 bp), pp. 141–68 in (Levy, T. E., ed.) The Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land. Leicester University Press: London.
Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 1997. The articulation of cultural processes and Late Quaternary environmental changes in Cisjordan. Paléorient 23: 71–93.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A. (eds.) 2003a. More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 2003b. Structures and dwellings in the Upper and Epi-Palaeolithic (ca. 42–10 K bp) Levant: profane and symbolic uses, pp. 65–81 in (Soffer, O., Vasil’ev, S. & Kozlowski, J., eds.) Perceived Landscapes and Built Environments. Actes du XIVème Congrès UISPP. BAR International Series 1122: Oxford.
Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 2006. A hard look at the “Levantine Aurignacian”: how real is the taxon?, pp. 297–314 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Zilhão, J., eds.) Towards a Definition of the Aurignacian. Trabalhos de Arqueologia 45. American School of Prehistoric Research/Instituto Português de Arqueologia: Lisbon.
Goring-Morris, A. N., Henry, D. O., Phillips, J. L., Clark, G. A., Barton, C. M. & Neeley, M. P. 1996. Pattern in the Epipalaeolithic of the Levant: debate after Neeley and Barton. Antiquity 70: 129–47.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A. N., Hovers, E. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 2009. The dynamics of Pleistocene settlement patterns and human adaptations in the Levant – an overview, pp. 187–254 in (Shea, J. J. & Lieberman, D., eds.) Transitions in Prehistory: Papers in Honor of Ofer Bar-Yosef. David Brown/Oxbow: Oakville, CT.
Goring-Morris, A. N. & Rosen, S. A. 1989. An Early Upper Palaeolithic assemblage with chamfered pieces from the Central Negev, Israel. Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society – Mitekufat Haeven 22: 31*–40*.Google Scholar
Henry, D. O. (ed.), 1995. Prehistoric Cultuarl Ecology and Evolution. Insights from Southern Jordan. Plenum Press: New York.
Hershkovitz, I., Spiers, M. S., Frayer, D., Nadel, D., Wish-Baratz, S. & Arensberg, B. 1995. Ohalo II – a 19,000 years old skeleton from a water-logged site at the Sea of Galilee. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 96: 215–34.Google Scholar
Hole, F. & Flannery, K. 1967. The prehistory of southwestern Iran: a preliminary report. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 33: 147–206.Google Scholar
Hooijer, D. A. 1961. The fossil vertebrates of Ksar ‘Akil, a Palaeolithic rock shelter in Lebanon. Zoologische Verhandelingen 49: 1–67.Google Scholar
Hours, F. 1976. L’Epipaléolithique au Liban. Résultats acquis en 1975, pp. 106–30 in (F. Wendorf, ed.) Deuxième Colloque sur la Terminologie de la Préhistoire du Proche-Orient. IXe Congrès de l’Union Interntionale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques, Nice.
Hovers, E. 1990. Art in the Levantine Epi-Palaeolithic: an engraved pebble from a Kebaran site in the Lower Jordan Valley. Current Anthropology 31: 317–22.Google Scholar
Kadosh, D., Sivan, D., Kutiel, H. & Weinstein-Evron, M. 2004. A Late Quaternary paleoenvironmental sequence from the coastal Plain, Israel. Palynology 28: 143–57.Google Scholar
Kaufman, D. 1989. Observations on the Geometric Kebaran: a view from Neve David, pp. 275–86 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Vandermeersch, B., eds.) Investigations in South Levantine Prehistory. BAR International Series 497: Oxford.
Kaufman, D. 1992. Hunter-gatherers of the Levantine Epipalaeolithic: the socioecological origins of sedentism. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 5: 165–201.Google Scholar
Kerry, K. W. & Henry, D. O. 2003. Tor Fawaz (J403): an Upper Palaeolithic occupation in the Jebel Qalkha area, southwest Jordan, pp. 171–84 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Kingery, D. W., Vandiver, P. B. & Pickett, M. 1988. The beginnings of pyrotechnology, pt. II. Production and use of lime and gypsum plaster in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Near East. Journal of Field Archaeology 15: 219–44.Google Scholar
Kislev, M. E., Nadel, D. & Carmi, I. 1992. Epipalaeolithic (19,000 bp) cereal and fruit diet at Ohalo II, Sea of Galilee, Israel. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 73: 161–6.Google Scholar
Kolodny, Y., Stein, M. & Machlus, M. 2005. Sea-rain-lake relation in the Last Glacial East Mediterranean revealed by d18O-d13C in Lake Lisan aragonites. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 69: 4045–60.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, J. K. 1992. The Balkans in the Middle and Upper Paleolithic: the gate to Europe or a cul-de-sac? Proceedings of the Prehistory Society 58: 1–20.Google Scholar
Kuhn, S. L. 2003. In what sense is the Levantine Initial Upper Paleolithic a “transitional” industry? pp. 61–70 in (Zilhão, J. & d’Errico, F., eds.) The Chronology of the Aurignacian and of the Transitional Technocomplexes. Instituto Portugues de Arqueologia: Lisbon.
Kuhn, S. L., Belfer-Cohen, A., Barzilai, O., Stiner, M. C., Kerry, K. W., Munro, N. D. & Bar-Yosef Mayer, D. E. 2004. The Last Glacial Maximum at Meged rockshelter, Upper Galilee, Israel. Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society – Mitekufat Haeven 34: 5–47.Google Scholar
Kuhn, S. L. & Stiner, M. C. 2007. Body ornamentation as information technology: towards an understanding of the significance of early beads, pp. 45–54 in (Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. & Stringer, C. B., eds.) Rethinking the Human Revolution. McDonald Institute of Archaeology: Cambridge.
Kuhn, S. L., Stiner, M. C., Güleç, E., Özer, I., Yilmaz, H., Baykara, I., Açikkol, A., Goldberg, P., Molina, K. M., Ünay, E. & Suata-Alpaslan, F. 2009. The early Upper Paleolithic occupations at Üçagizli Cave (Hatay, Turkey). Journal of Human Evolution 56: 87–113.Google Scholar
Kvavadze, E., Bar-Yosef, O., Belfer-Cohen, A., Boaretto, E., Jakeli, N., Matskevich, Z. & Meshveliani, T. 2009. 30,000-year-old wild flax fibers. Science 325: 1359.Google Scholar
Lengyel, G., Boaretto, E., Fabre, L. & Ronen, A. 2006. New AMS 14 C dates from the Early Upper Paleolithic sequence of Raqefet Cave, Mount Carmel, Israel. Radiocarbon 48: 253–8.Google Scholar
Maher, L. 2005. Recent Excavations at the Middle Epipalaeolithic encampment of ‘Uyun al-Hammam, northern Jordan. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 49: 101–14.Google Scholar
Maher, L. A. 2009. The Late Pleistocene of Arabia in relation to the Levant, pp. 187–202 in (Petraglia, M. D. & Rose, J. I., eds.) The Evolution of Human Populations in Arabia: Paleoenvironments, Prehistory and Genetics, Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology. Springer: New York.
Maher, L. A., Richter, T., Macdonald, D., Jones, M. D., Martine, L. & Stock, J. T. 2012. Twenty thousand-year-old huts at a hunter-gatherer settlement in eastern Jordan. PLoS ONE 7 (2): e31447.doc10.1371/journal.pone0031447.
Maher, L. A., Stock, J. T., Finney, S., Heywood, J. J. N., Miracle, P. T. & Banning, E. B. 2011. A unique human-fox burial from a Pre-Natufian cemetery in the Levant (Jordan). PLoS ONE 6 (1).
Marder, O. 2002. The Lithic Technology of Epipalaeolithic Hunter-Gatherers in the Negev: The Implications of Refitting Studies. Ph.D. thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Marder, O., Alex, B., Ayalon, A., Bar-Matthews, M., Bar-Oz, G., Bar-Yosef Mayer, D. E., Berna, F., Boaretto, E., Caracuta, V., Frumkin, A., Goder-Goldberger, M., Hershkovitz, I., Latimer, B., Lavi, R., Matthews, A., Weiner, S., Weiss, U., Yas'ur, G., Yeshurun, R. & Barzilai, O. 2013. The Upper Palaeolithic of Manot Cave, western Galilee, Israel: the 2011–12 excavations. Antiquity 87 (337): Project gallery.Google Scholar
Marks, A. E. 1981. The Upper Paleolithic of the Levant, pp. 369–74 in (Sanlaville, P. & Cauvin, J., eds.) Préhistoire du Levant. CNRS: Paris.
Marks, A. E. (ed.) 1983. Prehistory and Paleoenvironments in the Central Negev, Israel, vol. III. The Avdat/Aqev Area, pt. 3. SMU Press: Dallas, TX.
Marks, A. E. 2003. Reflections on Levantine Upper Palaeolithic studies: past and present, pp. 249–64 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Marks, A. E. & Kaufman, D. 1983. Boqer Tachtit: the artifacts. pp. 69–125 in (A. E. Marks, ed.) Prehistory and Paleoenvironments in the Central Negev, Israel, vol. III. The Avdat/Aqev Area,pt. 3. SMU Press: Dallas, TX.
Marshack, A. 1997. Paleolithic image making and symboling in Europe and the Middle East: A comparative review, pp. 53–91 in (Conkey, M., Soffer, O., Stratmann, D. & Jablonski, N. G., eds.) Beyond Art: Pleistocene Image and Symbol. Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences 23: San Francisco.
McBurney, C. B. M. 1967. The Haua Fteah (Cyrenaica) and the Stone Age of the Southeast Mediterranean. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
McBurney, C. B. M. 1968. The cave of Ali Tappeh and the Epipalaeolithic in N.E. Iran. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 34: 385–413.Google Scholar
Meignen, L. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1991. Les outillages lithiques moustériens de Kebara (Fouilles 1982–1985), pp. 49–76 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Vandermeersch, B., eds.) Le Squelette Moustérien de Kebara 2. CNRS: Paris.
Mellars, P. 2006. A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia. Nature 439: 931–5.Google Scholar
Mellars, P. 2009. La confusion aurignacienne: disentangling the archaeology of modern human dispersals in Europe. pp. 339–54 in (M. Camps and C. Szmidt, eds.), The Mediterranean from 50,000 to 25,000 bp: Turning Points and New Directions. Oxbow: Oxford.
Meshveliani, T., Bar-Oz, G., Bar-Yosef, O., Belfer-Cohen, A., Boaretto, E., Jakeli, N., Koridze, I. & Matskevich, Z. 2007. Mesolithic hunters at Kotias Klde, Western Georgia: preliminary results. Paléorient 33: 47–58.Google Scholar
Meshveliani, T., Bar-Yosef, O. & Belfer-Cohen, A. 2004. The Upper Palaeolithic in western Georgia, pp. 129–43 in (Brantingham, P. J., Kuhn, S. L. & Kerry, K. W., eds.) The Early Upper Paleolithic beyond Western Europe. University of California Press: Berkeley.
Monigal, K. 2003. Technology, economy and mobility at the beginning of the Levantine Upper Palaeolithic, pp. 118–33 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Nadel, D., Belitzky, S., Boaretto, E., Carmi, I., Heinemeier, J., Werker, E. & Marco, S. 2001. New dates from submerged Late Pleistocene sediments in the Southern Sea of Galilee, Israel, pp. 1167–78 in (Bruins, H. J., Carmi, I. & Boaretto, E., eds.) Near East Chronology: Archaeology and Environment, vol. 43 (3). Radiocarbon: Tucson.
Nadel, D., Grinberg, U., Boaretto, E. & Werker, E. 2006. Wooden objects from Ohalo II (23,000 cal bp), Jordan Valley, Israel. Journal of Human Evolution 50: 644–62.Google Scholar
Nadel, D., Tsatskin, A., Belmaker, M., Boaretto, E., Kislev, M., Mienis, H., Rabinovich, R., Simchoni, O., Simmons, T., Weiss, E. & Zohar, I. 2004. On the shore of a fluctuating lake: environmental evidence from Ohalo II (19,500 b.p.). Israel Journal of Earth Sciences 53: 207–23.Google Scholar
Nadel, D. & Werker, E. 1999. The oldest ever brush hut plant remains from Ohalo II, Jordan Valley, Israel (19,000 bp). Antiquity 73: 755–64.Google Scholar
Neuville, R. 1934. Le Préhistorique de Palestine. Revue Biblique 43: 237–59.Google Scholar
Neuville, R. 1951. Le Paléolithique et le Mésolithique du Désert de Judée. Archives de l’Institut de Paléontologie Humaine: Paris.
Newcomer, M. H. 1968–9. The chamfered pieces from Ksar Akil (Lebanon). Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology 8–9: 177–91.Google Scholar
Newcomer, M. H. 1974. Study and replication of bone tools from Ksar Akil (Lebanon). World Archaeology 6: 138–53.Google Scholar
Nioradze, M. G. & Otte, M. 2000. Paléolithique supérieur de Georgie. L’Anthropologie 104: 265–300.Google Scholar
Ohnuma, K. 1988. Ksar ‘Akil, Lebanon. A Technological Study of the Earlier Upper Palaeolithic Levels of Ksar ‘Akil, vol. III. Levels XXV–XIV. BAR International Series 426: Oxford.
Ohnuma, K. & Bergman, C. A. 1990. A technological analysis of the Upper Palaeolithic Levels (XXV–VI) of Ksar Akil, Lebanon, pp. 91–138 in (Mellars, P. & Stringer, C., eds.) The Emergence of Modern Humans: An Archaeological Perspective. Edinburgh University Press: Edinburgh.
Olivieri, A., Achilli, A., Pala, M., Battaglia, V., Fornarino, S., Al-Zahery, N., Scozzari, R., Cruciani, F., Behar, D. M., Dugoujon, J.-M., Coudray, C., Santachiara-Benerecetti, A. S., Semino, O., Bandelt, H.-J. & Torroni, A. 2006. The mtDNA legacy of the Levantine Early Upper Palaeolithic in Africa. Science 314: 1767–70.Google Scholar
Olszewski, D. I. 2006. Issues in the Levantine Epipaleolithic: the Madamaghan, Nebekian and Qalkhan (Levant Epipaleolithic). Paléorient 32: 19–26.Google Scholar
Olszewski, D. I. & Dibble, H. L. 1994. The Zagros Aurignacian. Current Anthropology 35: 68–75.Google Scholar
Olszewski, D. I. & Dibble, H. L. 2006. To be or not to be Aurignacian: the Zagros Upper Paleolithic, pp. 355–73 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Zilhão, J., eds.) Towards a Definition of the Aurignacian. American School of Prehistoric Research/Instituto Português de Arqueologia: Lisbon.
Otte, M. 2007. Arguments for population movement of anatomically modern humans from Central Asia to Europe, pp. 359–66 in (Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. & Stringer, C. B., eds.) Rethinking the Human Revolution. McDonald Institute of Archaeology: Cambridge.
Otte, M. 2008. Turkey, Paleolithic cultures, pp. 904–8 in (Pearsall, D. M., ed.) Encyclopedia of Archaeology. Academic Press: New York.
Otte, M., Biglari, F., Flas, D., Hashemi, N., Mashkour, M., Mohaseb, A., Naderi, R., Radu, W., Shidrang, S. & Zwyns, N. 2007. The Aurignacian in the Zagros region: new research at Yafteh Cave, Lorestan, Iran. Antiquity 81: 82–96.Google Scholar
Otte, M., Biglari, F. & Jaubert, J. (eds.) 2009. Iran Palaeolithic/Le Paléolithique d’Iran. BAR International Series 1968: Oxford.
Otte, M. & Yalçinkaya, I. 2009. The Palaeolithic of Turkey, pp. 101–24 in (M. Camps & C. Szmidt, eds.) The Mediterranean from 50,000 to 25,000 bp: Turning Points and New Directions. Oxbow: Oxford.
Perrot, J. 1968. La Préhistoire Palestinienne, pp. 286–446 in Supplément au Dictionnaire de la Bible, vol. 8. Letougey et Ane: Paris.
Piperno, D. R., Weiss, E., Holst, I. & Nadel, D. 2004. Processing of wild cereal grains in the Upper Palaeolithic revealed by starch grain analysis. Nature 430: 670–3.Google Scholar
Rabinovich, R. 2003. The Levantine Upper Palaeolithic faunal record, pp. 33–48 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Rebollo, N. R., Weiner, S., Brock, F., Meignen, L., Goldberg, P., Belfer-Cohen, A., Bar-Yosef, O. & Boaretto, E. 2011. New radiocarbon dating of the transition from the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic in Kebara Cave, Israel. Journal of Archaeological Science 38 (9): 2424–33.Google Scholar
Richter, T., Alcock, S., Asouti, E., Colledge, S., Jones, M., Maher, L., Martin, L., Stock, J. & Thorne, B. 2009. New light on Final Pleistocene settlement diversity in the Azraq Basin: some preliminary results from Ayn Qasiyah and AWS 48. Paléorient 35: 49–68Google Scholar
Richter, T., Garrard, A. N., Allcock, S. & Maher, L. 2010a. Interaction before agriculture: exchanging material and sharing knowledge in the Final Pleistocene Levant. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 21 (1): 95–114.Google Scholar
Richter, T., Stock, J. T., Maher, L. & Hebron, L. 2010b. An Early Epipalaeolithic sitting burial from the Azraq Oasis, Jordan. Antiquity 84: 321–34.Google Scholar
Rolston, S. L. 1982. Two prehistoric burials from Qasr Kharaneh. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 26: 221–9.Google Scholar
Ronen, A. 1976. The Upper Palaeolithic in northern Israel, Mt Carmel and Galilee, pp. 153–86 in (F. Wendorf, ed.) Deuxième Colloque sur la Terminologie de la Préhistoire du Proche-Orient. IXe Congrès de l’Union Interntionale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques, Nice.
Rosenberg, M. 1985. Report on the 1978 Sondage at Eshkaft-e Gavi. Iran 23: 51–62.Google Scholar
Rossignol-Strick, M. 1995. Sea-land correlation of pollen records in the Eastern Mediterranean for the Glacial-Interglacial transition: biostratigraphy versus radiometric time-scale. Quaternary Science Reviews 14: 893–915.Google Scholar
Rust, A. 1950. Die Höhlenfunde von Jabrud (Syrien). Karl Wachholtz: Neumunster.
Simmons, A. H. 2001. The first humans and last pygmy hippopotami of Cyprus, pp. 1–18 in (Swiny, S., ed.) The Earliest Prehistory of Cyprus: From First Colonization to Exploitation. CAARI Monograph series 2. ASOR Archaeological Reports 5: Boston.
Simmons, T. 2004. A feather for each wind that blows: utilizing avifauna in assessing change patterns in palaeoecology and subsistence at Jordan Valley archaeological sites, pp. 191–206 in (Goren-Inbar, N. & Speth, J. D., eds.) Palaeoecology of the Levantine Corridor. Oxbow: Oxford.
Smith, P., Bar-Yosef, O. & Sillen, A. 1984. Archaeological and skeletal evidence for dietary change during the late Pleistocene, pp. 101–36 in (Cohen, M. & Armelagos, G., eds.) At the Origins of Agriculture. Academic Press: New York.
Solecki, R. 1958. The Baradostian Industry and the Upper Palaeolithic in the Near East. Ann Arbor University Microfilms International.
Stekelis, M. & Bar-Yosef, O. 1965. Un habitat du Paléolithique Supérieur à Ein Guev (Israel). Note préliminaire. L’Anthropologie 69: 176–83.Google Scholar
Stiner, M. C. 2002. Carnivory, coevolution, and the geographic spread of the genus Homo. Journal of Archaeological Research 10: 1–63.Google Scholar
Stiner, M. C. (ed.) 2005. The Faunas of Hayonim Cave, Israel: A 200,000-Year Record of Paleolithic Diet, Demography and Society. American School of Prehistoric Research 48. Peabody Museum, Harvard University: Cambridge.
Stiner, M. C. & Munro, N. D. 2002. Approaches to prehistoric diet breadth, demography, and prey ranking systems in time and space. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 9: 181–214.Google Scholar
Stock, J. T., Pfeiffer, K., Chazan, M. & Janetski, J. 2005. F-81 skeleton from Wadi Mataha, Jordan, and its bearing on human variability in the Epipaleolithic of the Levant. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 128: 453–65.Google Scholar
Svoboda, J. & Bar-Yosef, O. 2003. Stranska Skala: Origins of the Upper Paleolithic in the Brno area, Moravia, Czech Republic. Peabody Museum, Harvard University: Cambridge.
Tchernov, E. 1981. The biostratigraphy of the Middle East, pp. 67–97 in (Sanlaville, P. & Cauvin, J., eds.) Préhistoire du Levant. CNRS: Paris.
Teyssandier, N. 2008. Revolution or evolution: the emergence of the Upper Paleolithic in Europe. World Archaeology 40: 493–519.Google Scholar
Tostevin, G. 2003. A quest for antecedents: a comparison of the Terminal Middle Palaeolithic and Early Upper Palaeolithic of the Levant, pp. 54–67 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Tsereteli, L. D. 1998. The Cultures of the Upper Paleolithic in Georgia, Close to the Black Sea. Matserba: Tbilisi.
Van Peer, P. 2004. Did Middle Stone age Moderns of Sub-Saharan African descent trigger an Upper Palaeolithic Revolution on in the Nile Valley. Anthropologie 42: 215–26.Google Scholar
van Zeist, W., Baruch, U. & Bottema, S. 2009. Holocene palaeoecology of the Hula area, north-eastern Israel, pp. 29–64 in (Kaptijn, E. & Petit, L. P., eds.) A Timeless Vale. Archaeological and Related Essays on the Jordan Valley in Honour of Gerrit van der Kooij on the Occasion of His Sixty-fifth Birthday. Archaeological Studies Leiden University. Leiden University Press: Leiden.
Vermeersch, P. M. 2001. “Out of Africa” from an Egyptian point of view. Quaternary International 75: 103–12.Google Scholar
Volkman, P. 1983. Boker Tachtit. Core reconstructions, pp. 127–88 in (Marks, A. E., ed.) Prehistory and Paleoenvironments in the Central Negev, Israel, vol. III. The Avdat/Aqev Area, pt. 3. SMU Press: Dallas.
Volkman, P. W. & Kaufman, D. 1983. A reassessment of the Emireh Point as a possible type-fossil for the technological shift from the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic in the Levant, pp. 35–52 in (Trinkaus, E., ed.) The Mousterian Legacy. BAR International Series 164: Oxford.
Waechter, J. d’A., Setton-Williams, V. M., Bate, D. A. & Picard, L. 1938. The excavations at Wadi Dhobai, 1937–38 and the Dhobaian Industry. Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society 18: 172–86, 292–8.Google Scholar
Wahida, G. 1999. The Zarzian industry of the Zagros Mountains, pp. 81–208 in (Davies, W. & Charles, R., eds.) Dorothy Garrod and the Progress of the Palaeolithic. Oxbow: Oxford.
Weinstein-Evron, M. 1990. Palynological history of the last Pleniglacial in the Levant, pp. 9–25 in (Kozlowski, J. K., ed.) Feuilles de Pierre: Les Industries à Pointes Foliacées du Paléolithique Supérieur Européen. ERAUL 42: Liège.
Weiss, E., Kislev, M. E., Simchoni, O., Nadel, D. & Tschauner, H. 2008. Plant-food preparation area on an Upper Paleolithic brush hut floor at Ohalo II, Israel. Journal of Archaeological Science 35: 2400–14.Google Scholar
Weiss, E., Wetterstrom, W., Nadel, D. & Bar-Yosef, O. 2004. The broad spectrum revisited: evidence from plant remains. PNAS 101: 9551–5.Google Scholar
Williams, J. K. 2003. An examination of Upper Palaeolithic flake technologies in the Marginal Zone of the Levant, pp. 196–208 in (Goring-Morris, A. N. & Belfer-Cohen, A., eds.) More than Meets the Eye: Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. Oxbow: Oxford.
Williams, J. K. 2006. The Levantine Aurignacian: a closer look, pp. 317–54 in (Bar-Yosef, O. & Zilhão, J., eds.) Towards a Definition of the Aurignacian. Trabalhos de Arqueologia 45. American School of Prehistoric Research/Instituto Português de Arqueologia: Lisbon.
Wright, K. 1991. The origins and development of ground stone assemblages in Late Pleistocene Southwest Asia. Paléorient 17: 19–45.Google Scholar
Yalçinkaya, I. & Otte, M. 2000. Début du Paléolithique supérieur à Karain (Turquie). L’Anthropologie 104: 51–62.Google Scholar
Yalçinkaya, I., Otte, M., Bar-Yosef, O., Kozlowski, J., Leotard, J.-M. & Taskiran, H. 1992. Karain 1991 Recherches Paléolithiques en Turquie du Sud. Rapport provisoire. Paléorient 18: 109–21.Google Scholar
Yalçinkaya, I., Otte, M., Koslowski, J. & Bar-Yosef, O. (eds.) 2002. La Grotte d’Öküzini: Évolution du Paléolithique Final du Sud-Ouest de l’Anatolie. Université de Liège Press 96: Liège.
Yaroshevich, A., Kaufman, D., Nuzhnyy, D., Bar-Yosef, O. & Weinstein-Evron, M. 2009. Design and performance of microlith-implemented projectiles during the Middle and the Late Epipaleolithic of the Levant: experimental and archaeological evidence. Journal of Archaeological Science 37: 368–88.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×