viernes, 17 de noviembre de 2017

Edición 17-11-17

Desaparición, por fusión, del Departamento de Prehistoria | Prehistoria UCM
Desde que en 1922 fuera creada la cátedra de “Historia Primitiva del Hombre” por el investigador alemán Hugo Obermaier, el Departamento de Prehistoria de la Universidad Complutense ha experimentado distintas etapas que le introdujeron en pleno siglo XXI como centro fundamental para los estudios arqueológicos y patrimoniales de España y de otras partes del mundo. En 2017 el Departamento cierra esta singladura independiente y se integra en uno mayor junto a los de Historia Antigua y Arqueología...

Un vecino encuentra por casualidad en Sober uno de los petroglifos más interesantes de la Ribeira Sacra
La roca con los grabados está situada en un lugar de la parroquia de Bolmente...

Foto: Carlos Rueda.
 
La Xunta confirma que uno de los petroglifos analizados sufrió daños a causa de los incendios de octubre 

Evento. Conferencia. Distorsiones de la Historia a través del cine: El caso Altamira - Revista Ecclesia
El eventeo se celebrará el próximo 21 de noviembre a las 19:30 horas en el Salón de grados de la FAcultda de Econñomicas y Ciencias Empresariales de la Universidad CEU San Pablo (Madrid)...

Murcia, ¿último santuario de los neandertales?

Así ahorraban madera en el Paleolítico 

El origen genético de la población española podría estar en La Bastida y La Almoloya

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Libro. Lascaux. Histoire et archéologie d'un joyau préhistorique - Romain Pigeaud, Jean-claude Golvin

Guides, la passion des grottes (France 3)
Vídeo. Guides, la passion des grottes (bande annonce). Ver en PaleoVídeos > L.R.2.14 nº 39.

A arte do "homo sapiens sapiens" - Descla
Portugal tem no Côa o maior museu do mundo de arte paleolítica ao ar livre...

Paleolithic ruins suggest Mousterian culture in China - China.org.cn
Paleolithic stone tools in the Mousterian style have been found in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, despite the culture generally being associated with Neanderthals from the Old Stone Age in Europe, Central and West Asia, and Northeast Africa.
Carbon-14 dating has determined that the site in East Ujimqin Banner, is between 37,000 and 47,000 years old.
Li Feng of the Chinese Academy of Sciences institute of vertebrate paleontology and paleoanthropology said the excavation may indicate that Neanderthals living between 120,000 and 30,000 years ago in Europe and West Asia moved further east than Siberia as previously thought. The site in Inner Mongolia is 2,000 km southeast of Siberia...

When did Australia’s human history begin? 
In July, a new date was published that pushed the opening chapters of Australian history back to 65,000 years ago. It is the latest development in a time revolution that has gripped the nation over the past half century.
In the 1950s, it was widely believed that the first Australians had arrived on this continent only a few thousand years earlier. They were regarded as “primitive” – a fossilised stage in human evolution – but not necessarily ancient.
In the decades since, Indigenous history has been pushed back into the dizzying expanse of deep time. While people have lived in Australia, volcanoes have erupted, dunefields have formed, glaciers have melted and sea levels have risen about 125 metres, transforming Lake Carpentaria into a Gulf and the Bassian Plain into a Strait....

Rock shelters reveal secrets of ancient human movement through the Pilbara to archaeologists | ABC Radio Australia
Archaeological research in Western Australia reveals how human occupation and migration occurred 40,000 years ago and sheds light on the extinction of its megafauna.
Thousands of rock shelters in the Hamersley Ranges of north-west Western Australia are revealing new evidence of how Aboriginal people moved inland across the Pilbara in ancient times.
Over the past six years, archaeologist Michael Slack and his team at Scarp Archaeology have excavated more than 200 rock shelters in the Newman area in a close working relationship with local Indigenous traditional owners...

Evento. Meet Lyuba, the baby mammoth who came in from the cold
She is 42,000 years old, and has come a long way for her Australian debut.
First, she was recovered from the frozen mud in Siberia that was her tomb for so long. Then she was packed into a crate at a tiny museum in Russia and flown to a humidity-controlled cube at the Australian Museum.
We will finally be able to see her from Saturday, when she is unveiled as the centrepiece of the museum's Mammoths  Giants of the Ice Age exhibition...


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