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Literatura académica sobre el tema "Paléolithique supérieur – Europe"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Paléolithique supérieur – Europe"
Otte, Marcel. "Le passage du Paléolithique moyen au Paléolithique supérieur en Europe centrale et orientale". Annales d'Université "Valahia" Târgovişte. Section d'Archéologie et d'Histoire 2, n.º 1 (2000): 61–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/valah.2000.875.
Texto completoTeyssandier, Nicolas. "l’émergence du Paléolithique supérieur en Europe : mutations culturelles et rythmes d’évolution". Paléo, n.º 19 (30 de diciembre de 2007): 367–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/paleo.702.
Texto completoLeroy-Prost, Christiane. "Djindjian F., Koslowski J., Otte M.: Le Paléolithique supérieur en Europe." L'Anthropologie 104, n.º 2 (abril de 2000): 357–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0003-5521(00)80053-9.
Texto completoKozłowski, Janusz K. "Origine des différentes traditions culturelles au Paléolithique supérieur ancien en Europe Centrale". L'Anthropologie 125, n.º 4 (septiembre de 2021): 102910. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anthro.2021.102910.
Texto completoLewis-Williams, David. "Mobiliser le cerveau : vision et chamanisme au Paléolithique supérieur en Europe de l'Ouest". Cahiers jungiens de psychanalyse 127, n.º 3 (2008): 11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/cjung.127.0011.
Texto completoForestier, Hubert, Michel Grenet, Antony Borel y Vincenzo Celiberti. "Les productions lithiques de l’Archipel indonésien". Journal of Lithic Studies 4, n.º 2 (15 de septiembre de 2017): 231–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.2218/jls.v4i2.2544.
Texto completoStraus, Lawrence Guy. "Comportement des Hommes du Paléolithique Moyen et Supérieur en Europe: Territoires et Milieux. Denis Vialou , Josette Renault-Miskovsky , Marylène Patou-Mathis". Journal of Anthropological Research 62, n.º 2 (julio de 2006): 268–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/jar.62.2.3630905.
Texto completoNigst, Philip R. y Paul Haesaerts. "L’Aurignacien en Basse Autriche : résultats préliminaires de l’analyse technologique de la couche culturelle 3 de Willendorf II et ses implications pour la chronologie du Paléolithique supérieur ancien en Europe centrale". L'Anthropologie 116, n.º 4 (septiembre de 2012): 575–608. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anthro.2011.10.004.
Texto completoSeuru, Samuel, Ariane Burke y Liliana Perez. "Réflexions sur la proportion du lapin de garenne (Oryctolagus cuniculus) dans le régime alimentaire des chasseurs-cueilleurs autour du Dernier Maximum Glaciaire en Ibérie". Trabajos de Prehistoria 78, n.º 2 (1 de diciembre de 2021): 221–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/tp.2021.12273.
Texto completoBougard, Estelle. "Comparaison de deux contextes d’utilisation de l’argile au paléolithique supérieur en Europe". Palethnologie, n.º 5 (30 de enero de 2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/palethnologie.5492.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Paléolithique supérieur – Europe"
Guy, Emmanuel. "Évolution des formes dans l'art figuratif paléolithique occidental : introduction à une grammaire stylistique". Paris 1, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA010635.
Texto completoOur research is centered upon the study of the means of representation in the figurative art of the hunters-gatherers of the upper palaeolithic. Far from reducing the study of style to a simple chronological tool (as is often the case) we wish to engage a vast exploration of the prehistoric figurative corpus, in order to demonstrate specific manners of representation. Indeed, every figure refers to a conventional range of forms that are indispensable to its legibility by the social group that it proceeds. This representational code conceived and developed by the group, constitutes a primary testimony of its particular world-view. Our objective was, therefore to establish, by rigourous observation, a grammar of palaeolithic forms which illuminates the transformations of the artistic vision, and in the sane time, those of the way of thinking of prehistoric cultures. Our stylistic approach permit to identify ten specific formal organisations. Of course, this first evaluation on prehistorical languages has to be completed later on, in order to better grasp their objectives tendancies, and goals
Louguet, Sophie. "Les très grands herbivores (éléphantidés et rhinocérotidés) au Paléolithique moyen en Europe du Nord-Ouest : Paléoécologie, taphonomie et aspects palethnographiques". Lille 1, 2004. https://pepite-depot.univ-lille.fr/RESTREINT/Th_Num/2004/50377-2004-36.pdf.
Texto completoRobert, Éric. "Les signes et leurs supports pariétaux : analyse comparée des rapports entre les représentations abstraites et les reliefs naturels dans les grottes ornées du Paléolithique supérieur au sein de l'espace franco-cantabrique". Paris 1, 2006. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01702797.
Texto completoRenard, Caroline. "Les premières expressions du Solutréen dans le Sud-Ouest français : évolution techno-économique des équipements lithiques au cours du dernier maximum glaciaire". Paris 10, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA100173.
Texto completoThe strong typological identity and the very singular stylistic patterns of the Solutrean lithic tool-kit have led to its interpretation as a unified cultural entity. The Solutrean is characterized by the the successive appearance of lithic tools that are specific to this techno-complex: pointes à face plane of the Early Solutrean, laurel leaves and shouldered points of the Recent Solutrean. This work envisions the Solutrean from the view point of lithic techno-economic patterns. The analysis of several key-assemblages from the beginning of the Solutrean in South-Western France is able to distinguish two distinct typo-technological stages: the Protosolutrean (including Vale Comprido points) and the Early Solutrean characterized by the development of pointes à face plane. The comparison between these two sets of complexes leads us to propose a typo-technological mechanism for the evolution of lithic tools and core reduction sequences from the Protosolutrean to the Early Solutrean. The first Solutrean expressions are then incorporated into a more diachronic perspective and compared to the recent stages of development of that techno-complex. The Solutrean is defined by an evolution towards more diversified and specialized hunting weapons that represents the adaptation of human groups to the rigorous climatic context of the last glacial maximum. Our new technological definition of the earliest stages of the Solutrean lead us to interpret its technical evolution in socio-economic terms
Petrognani, Stéphane. "De Chauvet à Lascaux : approche critique des ensembles ornés anté-magdaléniens franco-ibériques". Paris 1, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA010662.
Texto completoBaker, Jack. "Analyse des objets de parure pour explorer la diversité culturelle et sociale au cours du Gravettien en Europe". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Bordeaux, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024BORD0277.
Texto completoThe Gravettian (34–24 ka) is widely considered as the final Pan-European technocomplex before the regional fragmentation of the population following the Last Glacial Maxima. Personal ornaments have been shown to be powerful indicators of social status and cultural affiliation. Hitherto, the ubiquitous personal ornaments found in occupation and burial sites characterising the Gravettian have yet to be the subject of a comprehensive study. The primary aim of the PhD was to document the variability in bead-type associations and identify the mechanisms driving this diversity at both regional and European scales during the Gravettian period. Achieving this paved the way for the second aim: investigating the cultural geography of Gravettian communities. We first provide an in-depth analysis of the numerous personal ornaments coming from a key Gravettian funerary site, Cro-Magnon (Dordogne, France). Subsequently, we created a representative georeferenced bead database of Gravettian personal ornaments encompassing 164 types coming from over 130 sites across Europe and analyse it using multivariate and spatial statistical methods, such as principal coordinates analysis (PCoA), Neighbour-joining, Neighbour-net, seriation and Mantel correlations and correlograms. We then proceeded to compare and contrast the Gravettian personal ornaments with those coming from the preceding Aurignacian using similar analyses in addition to k-means clustering, perMANOVA and Archaeological Similarity Networks to investigate whether continuity existed between these two technocomplexes. Analysis of the personal ornaments found at Cro-Magnon revealed the existence of extensive exchange networks across the continent. Despite sharing similarities with ornaments from other nearby groups in Dordogne, the Cro-Magnon ornaments exhibit a distinctiveness, i.e., a small, rather than large, number of decorated ivory pendants and a large, rather than small, number of shell ornaments, that highlights this people’s desire to assert their unique identity within a broader symbolic context. The recalibration of the only available radiocarbon date for this site suggests that a more extensive dating campaign is necessary to chronologically attribute this iconic site accurately. The analysis of the European-scale Gravettian database reveals that this technocomplex was split into nine groups who wore different bead-type associations which were organized in an east-west cline across Europe. Whereas Gravettian groups from the east of Europe wore personal ornaments predominantly fashioned from ivory, stone and mammal carnivore teeth, groups from the west tended to wear beads made from 8 marine shells and mammal herbivore teeth. The observed differences in bead-type associations were shown to not be solely due to Isolation-by-Distance. From this we concluded that a sense of cultural belonging dictated the personal ornament types different groups of Gravettian people wore. Burial and occupation sites were characterised by distinct patterns of personal ornament associations. The observed difference between burial groups was higher than the difference between occupation groups. The comparison of the Gravettian and Aurignacian databases unveiled stark similarities in terms of personal ornament choices between the two technocomplexes. The Gravettian was characterised by regions of similar personal ornament associations which had over ten times the surface area and which were more interconnected than those of the Aurignacian. Personal ornaments types fully carved out of osseous and lithic material better marked the cultural divide between these two technocomplexes than those produced from minimally modified natural forms
Villotte, Sébastien. "Enthésopathies et activités des hommes préhistoriques - Recherche méthodologique et application aux fossiles européens du Paléolithique supérieur et du Mésolithique". Phd thesis, Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux I, 2008. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00460387.
Texto completoLecervoisier, Bertrand. "Étude stratigraphique, sédimentologique, micromorphologique et paléoclimatique de remplissages de grottes du Pléistocène supérieur ancien de l'Europe méditerranéenne : Sites moustériens du Boquete de Zafarraya (Andalousie), de Madonna dell'Arma (Ligurie) et de Kalamakia (Laconie, Péloponnèse)". Phd thesis, Museum national d'histoire naturelle - MNHN PARIS, 2003. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00702639.
Texto completoFabre, Magali. "Environnement et subsistance au Pléistocène supérieur dans l'est de la France et au Luxembourg : étude ostéologique des gisements de la Baume de Gigny (Jura), Vergisson II (Saône-et-Loire) et Oetrange (Luxembourg)". Phd thesis, Université de Provence - Aix-Marseille I, 2010. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00617613.
Texto completoFuentes, Rodriguez Oscar Gonzalo. "La forme humaine dans l'art magdalénien et ses enjeux : approche des structures élémentaires de notre image et son incidence dans l'univers symbolique et social des groupes paléolithiques". Paris 1, 2013. https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01337663.
Texto completoLibros sobre el tema "Paléolithique supérieur – Europe"
Demars, Pierre-Yves. Types d'outils lithiques du paléolithique supérieur en Europe. Paris: Éditions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1992.
Buscar texto completoDemars, Pierre-Yves. Types d'outils lithiques du paléolithique supérieur en Europe. Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1989.
Buscar texto completoFrançois, Djindjian, Kozłowski Janusz Krzysztof, Bicho Nuno Ferreira y International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, eds. Le concept de territoires dans le Paléolithique supérieur européen. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2009.
Buscar texto completoVillotte, Sébastien. Enthésopathies et activités des hommes préhistoriques: Recherche méthodologique et application aux fossiles européens du Paléolithique supérieur et du Mésolithique. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2009.
Buscar texto completoLe Paléolithique supérieur en Europe. Armand Colin, 1999.
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