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Animal teeth and human tools: a tephonomic odyssey in ice age siberia / by Christy G Turner, Nicolai D Ovodov and Olga V Pavlova

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Cambridge : CUP, 2013.Description: x, 490p. : illISBN:
  • 9781107030299
Subject(s): Other classification:
  • Y71:381.48 Q3
Summary: The culmination of more than a decade of fieldwork and related study, this unique book uses analyses of perimortem taphonomy in Ice Age Siberia to propose a new hypothesis for the peopling of the New World. The authors present evidence based on examinations of more than 9000 pieces of human and carnivore bone from 30 late Pleistocene archaeological and palaeontological sites, including cave and open locations, which span more than 2000 miles from the Ob River in the West to the Sea of Japan in the East. The observed bone damage signatures suggest that the conventional prehistory of Siberia needs revision and, in particular, that cave hyenas had a significant influence on the lives of Ice Age Siberians. The findings are supported by more than 250 photographs, which illustrate the bone damage described and provide a valuable insight into the context and landscape of the fieldwork for those unfamiliar with Siberia.
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Item type Current library Home library Call number Status Barcode
Textual Textual Central Science Library Central Science Library Y71:381.48 Q3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available SL1598276

Appendices 409-459p.; References 460-485p.; Index 486-490p.

The culmination of more than a decade of fieldwork and related study, this unique book uses analyses of perimortem taphonomy in Ice Age Siberia to propose a new hypothesis for the peopling of the New World. The authors present evidence based on examinations of more than 9000 pieces of human and carnivore bone from 30 late Pleistocene archaeological and palaeontological sites, including cave and open locations, which span more than 2000 miles from the Ob River in the West to the Sea of Japan in the East. The observed bone damage signatures suggest that the conventional prehistory of Siberia needs revision and, in particular, that cave hyenas had a significant influence on the lives of Ice Age Siberians. The findings are supported by more than 250 photographs, which illustrate the bone damage described and provide a valuable insight into the context and landscape of the fieldwork for those unfamiliar with Siberia.

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