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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Archeometry of Five Pleistocene Sites as Inferred from Uranium and Thorium Isotopic Abundances in Travertine

Blackwell, Bonnie January 1980 (has links)
The U/Th dating method has been applied to five archeological sites in France. The U/Th method relies upon the co-precipitation of uranium with calcium carbonate in speleothems formed in caves. Because 230Th forms in the calcite from the decay of 234U a radiometric clock is begun in the newly deposited calcite. Dates are derived from measuring the isotopic abundances of the uranium and thorium in the calcite. For many archeological samples, preroasting of the sample before analysis is necessary to improve the yields. Normally, relative dates for archeological sites are derived from the comparison of paleoclimatic interpretations determined from sedimentological, faunal, and palynological studies of the cave sediments with global climatic records. These methods have established that the Mousterian culture and Neanderthals appeared in Europe at the beginning of the Würm, 80 Ka BP. Absolute dates determined for samples from Lachaise, Montgaudier, Pech de l'Aze, Abri Vaufrey, and Grotte 13, where archeological or faunal material is associated stratigraphically with speleothems sampled, have established that there were several regional climatic phenomena experienced in southern France. These events are dated at 80 to 120 Ka BP, interpreted to be the Riss/ Würm interglacial, and at 38 to 50 Ka, interpreted to be the Würm I/II interstadial. Furthermore, archeological materials and human skeletal remains associated with these sites and the speleothems therein, have proven that the Nean~erthals must have evolved prior to 150 Ka BP, but that they did not develop their Mousterian culture until about 125 Ka BP. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
2

THE USE OF ANIMAL RESOURCES IN THE MOUSTERIAN OF COMBE GRENAL, FRANCE.

CHASE, PHILIP GRATON. January 1983 (has links)
The economic life of Europe's Middle Paleolithic inhabitants is poorly known; at only a few sites have the relationships between subsistence behavior and other variables been studied in any detail. The deeply stratified site of Combe Grenal, Dordogne, France, provided an opportunity to study one part of this problem in one of the archaeologically best-known areas of Western Europe. Three aspects of animal exploitation (species preference, carcass use, and butchering techniques) were examined in relationship to each other and to three other variables (climate, associated lithic assemblages, and time). The results of this study, supported by data from Middle Paleolithic sites in the rest of Europe, provide an overall picture of the nature of Mousterian subsistence systems. Middle Paleolithic economies were based on a purposeful, eclectic, and internally diversified set of activities. These show a remarkable persistence through time and a remarkable independence from changes in both climate and lithic industry, while showing little evidence of evolutionary development. The striking conservatism in behavior has implications both for our evaluations of the efficiency of Mousterian technologies and for our concepts of the nature of Middle Paleolithic culture.

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