Journal Article10.1016/j.quascirev.2024.108546
Interactions in bones but not stone: Anomalous cultural transmission gaps in Romania's Middle to Upper Paleolithic Transition
Wei Chu,Adrian Doboş,Marie Soressi +2 more
2
TL;DR: Romania's Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition shows anomalous cultural transmission gaps, with no evidence of novel technology despite Neandertal-modern human contact, highlighting incomplete understanding of hybridized material culture and raw material eccentricities.
read more
Abstract: The Late Pleistocene archeological record shows emerging patterns of population turnover frequently associated with technological change between c. 50–40 thousand years ago. In Europe, this is thought to be related to indigenous population admixture and/or the diffusion of developing technologies by Homo sapiens resulting in a widely distributed spatiotemporal patchwork of industries with combinations of Middle and Upper Paleolithic traits. The Late Pleistocene record of Romania forms an anomaly in these scenarios. On the one hand, the country has important Pleistocene archives that preserve direct evidence of early modern humans with Neandertal genetic introgression. On the other hand, Romania shows no evidence of novel technology during the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition. Here, we review the Late Middle and Early Upper Paleolithic archeological record of Romania supplemented with new radiocarbon ages and excavation data to clarify the validity of this current archeological interpretation. We conclude that while Neandertals and modern humans were in regional contact, raw materials eccentricities and incomplete empirical knowledge of past intergroup cultural transmission have obscured our ability to identify indicative material cultural signals indicating that current methods of understanding hybridized material culture are incomplete.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Evidence for the oldest Middle Palaeolithic cave occupation in the Romanian Carpathians
Christoph Schmidt,Dániel Veres,George Murătoreanu,Marian Cosac,Loredana Niţă,Ștefan Vasile,Gabriel Sebastian Şerbănescu,Iuliana‐Elisabeta Bartok +7 more
TL;DR: New radiocarbon and OSL dating of Romanian Carpathian caves (Abri 122/1200 and Peștera Mare) reveals Middle Palaeolithic occupation since MIS 7, challenging current understanding of Neanderthal dynamics and habitats in central-western Europe.
IUP Technological Signatures or Mousterian Variability? The Case of Riparo l'Oscurusciuto (Southern Italy)
Leonardo Carmignani,Marie Soressi,Annamaria Ronchitelli,Francesco Boschin +3 more
TL;DR: This study reevaluates the Late Middle Paleolithic assemblages at Riparo l'Oscurusciuto in southern Italy, revealing technological features similar to those of the Initial Upper Paleolithic, and highlights the need to reassess the region's variability in light of recent theories on early Homo sapiens arrival in Europe.
References
The Archaeology of Caves in Romania
Mircea Anghelinu,Adina Boroneanț +1 more
- 01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: The earliest evidence for the human use of caves in the Romanian Carpathian area belongs to the Last Interglacial Neanderthals, but Last Glacial Mousterian presence was also reported as discussed by the authors.
3
Reply to Martens: Various factors may enable large populations to enhance cumulative cultural evolution, but more evidence is needed.
TL;DR: It is not concluded that larger populations do not enhance CCE but that other factors may be necessary to see this effect, and the basic effect of population size on CCE is isolated by excluding extraneous factors, including model-based bias.
Hominin Footprints in Caves from Romanian Carpathians
Bogdan P. Onac,Daniel Veres,Chris Stringer +2 more
- 01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that humans must have entered caves in Romania at least as early as 170,000 years ago, and they show that ancient human footprints are very rare in the fossil record of East-Central Europe, with only two known locations in the Apuseni Mountains of western Romania.
Persani Mountains: Karst of Vârghis Gorge
Daniel Veres,Marian Cosac,George Murătoreanu,Ulrich Hambach +3 more
- 01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: In this paper, a volcanic ash layer within Bear's (Ursului) Cave originating from the Ciomadul volcanic complex (East Carpathians) and dated to ~43/50 ka highlights the potential of Vârghiș karst in preserving such isochronous marker horizons.
2