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Dental calculus evidence of Gravettian diet and behavior at Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov

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Dental calculus evidence of Gravettian diet and behavior at Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov

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dc.contributor.author Power, Robert C.
dc.contributor.author Salazar García, Domingo Carlos
dc.contributor.author Henry, Amanda G.
dc.date.accessioned 2016-09-16T08:07:08Z
dc.date.available 2016-09-16T08:07:08Z
dc.date.issued 2016 es_ES
dc.identifier.citation Power, Robert C., Salazar-García D.C., Henry A.G. (2016). "Dental calculus evidence of Gravettian diet and behaviour at Dolní Věstonice and Pavlov". In: Svoboda J. (Ed.). Dolní Věstonice II. Chronostratigraphy, Paleoethnology, Paleoanthropology. Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic-Institute of Archaeology at Brno: pp. 345-352. es_ES
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10550/55030
dc.description.abstract How modern humans colonised the frigid Late Pleistocene North European Plain is a major theme in the study of human origins. Research has made strides in revealing the technology, art, settlement and subsistence of groups in these northern environments. Although the refuse of ancient meals are frequently found in Gravettian occupational layers in the form of the skeletal remains of fauna, much of what we know about Gravettian and indeed Upper Paleolithic subsistence is incomplete and biased towards certain food types, particularly animal foods (Svoboda et al. 2005; Tagliacozzo et al. 2012). Understanding vegetal diet in order to explain the subsistence strategies of Upper Palaeolithic Eurasians is increasingly gaining importance despite the problem that they leave only ephemeral remains. (Jones 2009). Plant remains are rare or absent on virtually all Gravettian sites in northern and central Europe (Jones 2009). This lack of information biases our reconstructions of Paleolithic diets, limiting our ability to explore the variation and complexity of diet across time and space. Recent advances using plant micro-remains trapped in dental calculus from Palaeolithic chronologies have provided a new window into ancient diets (Salazar-García et al. 2013; Henry et al. 2014; Power et al. 2015a). es_ES
dc.language.iso en es_ES
dc.relation.ispartofseries Studies in Paleoanthropology and Paleoethnology of Eurasia;
dc.title Dental calculus evidence of Gravettian diet and behavior at Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov es_ES
dc.type book part es_ES
dc.subject.unesco UNESCO::HISTORIA es_ES
dc.identifier.idgrec 873626 es_ES

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