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Recent work on the Paleolithic of Central Asia

Richard S. DavisRichard S. Davis is Professor of Anthropology at Bryn Mawr College. He first worked in Tajikistan in 1971 as part of his doctoral research on Paleolithic Afghanistan. He is interested in the emergence of a variety of hominine cultural adaptations in Central and Northern Asia and is now working on the archeology of early maritime people in the AleutiansVadim A. RanovVadim A. Ranov is a Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences, Republic of Tajikistan. He has pursued an active archeological research program in Tajikistan and Central Asia for over 45 years and has over 800 publications concerning his work. Most recently, he was supported by the National Geographic Society for excavations at Khudzhi, a Middle Paleolithic site in the Gissar Valley of Tajikistan
1999en
ABI

Аннотация

Central Asia has played an important role in Paleolithic archeology since the discovery of Teshik-Tash in 1938. Since the 1970s, attention has turned to Lower Paleolithic studies following the important discoveries at Kul'dara and other deeply stratified loess sites in southern Tajikistan. The sites, dated to as early as 800,000 years ago, are not the earliest evidence of hominids in Asia, but they do reflect early adaptations to arid mid-latitude environments. The stone-tool industries from these early sites are composed of pebble and flake implements; they do not include bifaces. Along with the archeological material in the loess is an impressive paleoenvironmental record with good chronological control. In other parts of Central Asia, there are reported elements of the Acheulean technocomplex at sites such as Sel'ungur and Yangadazha, but that claim cannot be substantiated. In the Upper Pleistocene, important research questions include the extent and meaning of Middle Paleolithic variability, the relation of Middle to Upper Paleolithic cultures, and the effect of glacial or interglacial climatic oscillations on Paleolithic settlement and adaptation.

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