Search results for "Hunter-gatherer"

showing 8 items of 18 documents

Palaeogenomics of Upper Palaeolithic to Neolithic European hunter-gatherers

2023

Acknowledgements: The authors thank G. Marciani and O. Jöris for comments on archaeology; C. Jeong, M. Spyrou and K. Prüfer for comments on genetics; M. O’Reilly for graphical support for Fig. 5 and Extended Data Fig. 9; the entire IT and laboratory teams at the Department of Archaeogenetics of MPI-SHH for technical assistance; M. Meyer and S. Nagel for support with single-stranded library preparation; K. Post, P. van Es, J. Glimmerveen, M. Medendorp, M. Sier, S. Dikstra, M. Dikstra, R. van Eerden, D. Duineveld and A. Hoekman for providing access to human specimens from the North Sea (The Netherlands); M. D. Garralda and A. Estalrrich for providing access to human specimens from La Riera (S…

HistoryAncient dnaInteractionsCave/45/23AdmixtureSettore BIO/08 - Antropologia/631/208/457/631/181/276160 Other humanitiesContaminationHumansHuntingPalaeogenomicsPopulation-structureArchaeology ; Biological anthropology ; Evolutionary genetics ; Population geneticsHistory AncientHuman evolutionDiversityOccupationMultidisciplinary/45Genome HumanarticlePaleontologyLast glacial maximumHuman GeneticsGene PoolGenomics/631/181/19/2471PleistoceneEuropeGenomic transformationsArchaeology/631/181/2474AnthropologyHunter-gatherersGenome sequence
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Genetic discontinuity between local hunter-gatherers and central Europe's first farmers.

2009

Cultivating Farmers Were the ancestors of modern Europeans the local hunter-gatherers who assimilated farming practices from neighboring cultures, or were they farmers who migrated from the Near East in the early Neolithic? By analyzing ancient hunter-gatherer skeletal DNA from 2300 to 13,400 B.C.E. Bramanti et al. (p. 137 , published online 3 September) investigated the genetic relationship of European Ice Age hunter-gatherers, the first farmers of Europe, and modern Europeans. The results reject the hypothesis of direct continuity between hunter-gatherers and early farmers and between hunter-gatherers and modern Europeans. Major parts of central and northern Europe were colonized by incom…

MaleArchaeogeneticsHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationPopulationEuropean Continental Ancestry GroupPopulation DynamicsAgriculture; DNA Mitochondrial; Emigration and Immigration; Europe; European Continental Ancestry Group; Female; Genetic Variation; Haplotypes; History Ancient; Humans; Male; Population Dynamics; ProbabilityBiologyDNA MitochondrialWhite PeopleNOAncientDemic diffusionHumansDomesticationeducationHunter-gathererHistory Ancientmedia_commonProbabilityGeneticseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryMiddle Eastbusiness.industryGenetic VariationAgricultureDNAEmigration and ImmigrationMitochondrialEuropeHaplotypesAgricultureEthnologyFemalebusiness
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Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherer subsistence in Mediterranean coastal environments: an isotopic study of the diets of earliest directlyt-dated huma…

2011

Abstract The subsistence of hunter-gatherers in the Mediterranean Basin has been the object of few studies, which have not fully clarified the role of aquatic resources in their diets. Here we present the results of AMS radiocarbon dating and of isotope analyses on the earliest directly-dated human remains from Sicily, the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea. The radiocarbon determinations show that the Upper Palaeolithic (Epigravettian) humans from Grotta di San Teodoro (15 232–14 126 cal. BP) and Grotta Addaura Caprara (16 060–15 007 cal. BP) date to the Late-glacial and were possibly contemporary. The diets of these individuals were dominated by the protein of large terrestrial mamma…

Mediterranean climate010506 paleontologyArcheologyUpper palaeolithicPleistoceneUpper palaeolithic; Sicily; diet reconstruction; isotopes; anthropologyBiodiversitySettore BIO/08 - Antropologiadiet reconstruction01 natural sciencesMediterranean Basinlaw.inventionMediterranean sealawanthropology0601 history and archaeology14. Life underwaterRadiocarbon datingisotopeSicilyHunter-gatherer0105 earth and related environmental sciences060102 archaeologyEcologyLast Glacial Maximum06 humanities and the artsArchaeologyGeology
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Surviving the Holocene: Human Ecological Responses to the Current Interglacial in Southern Valencia, Spain

2009

For hunter-gatherer groups, the dramatic changes in climate at the end of the last glacial cycle necessitated rearrangement of land use, including shifts in mobility strategies, settlement location, and resource use. We examine these behavioral changes using lithic attribute data as well as spatial distributions of artifacts and features. Using data from intensive survey and excavation, we trace human ecological response through the onset of the current interglacial in central Mediterranean Spain, comparatively far from the margins of the north-temperate ice sheets.

Mediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PleistoceneEcologyAnthropologyInterglacialPaleoecologyGlacial periodIce sheetHunter-gathererHoloceneJournal of Anthropological Research
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From the Mesolithic to the Neolithic on the Mediterranean Coast of the Iberian Peninsula

2009

This paper summarizes early Holocene cultural sequences, economic strategies, and social dynamics on the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula. Recent research in the central-southern regions of Valencia provides important diachronic information, particularly for discerning the nature of the shift from a hunter-gatherer lisfestyle to agricultura. If biogeographic conditions played a leading role in determining exploitation strategies, the recognizing distinctive social responses is crucial for understanding the impact of the changes that occurred.

Mediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEpipaleolithicPaleolíticArchaeologySocial dynamicsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PeninsulaAnthropologyPaleoecologyHunter-gathererMesolithicHoloceneJournal of Anthropological Research
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More data on ancient human mitogenome variability in Italy: new mitochondrial genome sequences from three Upper Palaeolithic burials.

2021

BACKGROUND: Recently, the study of mitochondrial variability in ancient humans has allowed the definition of population dynamics that characterised Europe in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene. Despite the abundance of sites and skeletal remains few data are available for Italy. - AIM: We reconstructed the mitochondrial genomes of three Upper Palaeolithic individuals for some of the most important Italian archaeological contexts: Paglicci (South-Eastern Italy), San Teodoro (South-Western Italy) and Arene Candide (North-Western Italy) caves. - SUBJECTS AND METHODS We explored the phylogenetic relationships of the three mitogenomes in the context of Western Eurasian ancient and modern va…

Mitochondrial DNA; ancient DNA; Upper Palaeolithic; Italian huntergatherers; LGMAgingMitochondrial DNAPleistocenePhysiologyEpidemiologyLineage (evolution)PopulationItalian huntergatherersContext (language use)Settore BIO/08 - AntropologiaCaveGeneticsHumansDNA Ancienteducationancient DNAHolocenegeographyeducation.field_of_studygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGenome HumanPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthUpper PalaeolithicLGMMitochondrial DNAAncient DNAArchaeologyItalyItalian hunter-gatherersEvolutionary biologyGenome MitochondrialAnnals of human biology
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Roots of the Savage Mind. Apophenia and Imagination as Cognitive Process

2009

l'articolo studia il ruolo cognitivo dell'immaginario con particolare riferimento alle culture di caccia e raccolta e al problema della costruzione simbolica del paesaggio

Settore M-DEA/01 - Discipline Demoetnoantropologichehunter-gatherers cognitive processes apophenia hunting Landscape Mind Theory
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Hunter-GatHerer Game: uno strumento simulativo dei comportamenti di caccia/raccolta nel mondo paleolitico

2013

In this paper we present the Hunter-Gatherer Game, a computer simulation of an environment where the individual and group survival depends on the ability to capture a prey or to find edible vegetables. The instrument is based on the Darwinian Hunter-Gatherer Theory stating that, during the Palaeolithic age, natural selection designed different gender preferences for foraging strategies (hunting in men and gathering in women), which are still sculpted in our modern brains. At present we are using the Hunter-Gatherer Game in order to experimentally test the above-mentioned theory, even though it also encompasses a number of potential applications.

Settore M-PSI/01 - Psicologia GeneraleHunter-Gatherer TheorySettore INF/01 - InformaticaTeoria del Cacciatore-Raccoglitore Psicologia evoluzionistica giochi simulativiSimulation GamesEvolutionary Psychology
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