Fishing in life and death: Pleistocene fish-hooks from a burial context on Alor Island, Indonesia, Antiquity
By A Mystery Man Writer
Description
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Skeletal remains of a Pleistocene modern human (Homo sapiens) from Sulawesi
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Faces in the Stone: Further Finds of Anthropomorphic Engravings Suggest a Discrete Artistic Tradition Flourished in Timor-Leste in the Terminal Pleistocene, Cambridge Archaeological Journal
PDF) Lingering Traditions: Molluscan Shells and Objects as Grave Goods in Human Burial Context at Protohistoric Settlements in IndiaDeshpande-Mukherjee
Pleistocene Water Crossings and Adaptive Flexibility Within the Homo Genus
Faces in the Stone: Further Finds of Anthropomorphic Engravings Suggest a Discrete Artistic Tradition Flourished in Timor-Leste in the Terminal Pleistocene, Cambridge Archaeological Journal
The invisible plant technology of Prehistoric Southeast Asia: Indirect evidence for basket and rope making at Tabon Cave, Philippines, 39-33,000 years ago. - Abstract - Europe PMC
Forty-thousand years of maritime subsistence near a changing shoreline on Alor Island (Indonesia) - ScienceDirect
Talking Dead. New burials from Tron Bon Lei (Alor Island, Indonesia) inform on the evolution of mortuary practices from the terminal Pleistocene to the Holocene in Southeast Asia
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Fishing in life and death: Pleistocene fish-hooks from a burial context on Alor Island, Indonesia, Antiquity
The Southern Route to Sahul: Modern Human Dispersal and Adaptation in the Pleistocene
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