Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Eleni Panagopoulou , Curt Runnels , K. Harvati , DAMIAN J. RIVERS , Stephanie Ann Houghton , Kayoko Hashimoto
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
ANO 2018
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 13
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 BBF92583D1BB5F03589E72A1A4D0C8FB
MD5 a7b8a00eb22909aaf5103e3eb69dba19

Resumo

European paleoanthropology and paleolithic archeology were already well‐established by the early twentieth century. The human fossil record from this continent is the longest known and perhaps most intensively studied. Nonetheless, important gaps remain to this day in the map of Pleistocene Europe; perhaps the most glaring of these is located in the southeastern corner of the continent. This region's record is critical for addressing questions about the course of human evolution in Europe because its geographic position lends it a dual role: on one hand, it encompasses a frequently hypothesized dispersal corridor from Africa into Europe for both archaic and early modern humans; on the other, as one of the three Mediterranean peninsulas, it acted as a refugium for plant, animal, and, most likely, human populations during glacial conditions. This article is a review of the paleoanthopological record of Greece, one of the least known in Europe.

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