Introduction to Paleoanthropology/UpperPaleolithic
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[edit] Early Upper Paleolithic Cultures
[edit] Aurignacian
[edit] First Discovered
- Aurignac (Dordogne, France)
[edit] Chronology
- ca. 35,000-27,000 BC
[edit] Geography
- Widespread distribution over Eurasia
- Siberia (Sungir)
[edit] Hominid
- Modern humans (Homo sapiens)
[edit] Material Culture
- Upper Paleolithic-type lithic industry
- Aurignacian blades, burins, endscrapers, etc.
- Bone Tools
[edit] Mortuary practices
- Definitive elaborate burials, with grave goods
[edit] Symbolic Expression
Proliferation of various forms of personal ornaments:
- perforated animal-teeth;
- distinctive "bead" forms carved out of bone and mammoth ivory;
- earliest perforated marine shells
[edit] Artistic Expression
Types of evidence:
- Engraved limestone blocks
- Animal and human figurines
- Parietal art
Engraved block characteristics:
- Stiffness of outlines;
- Deep incisions;
- Work executed mainly on limestone slabs or blocks;
- Sexual symbols realistically represented;
- Animals (usually heads, forequarters and dorsal lines) extremely crudely rendered;
- This type of artistic expression limited to southwest France (mainly Dordogne).
Figurine characteristics:
- Earliest evidence of artwork in the Upper Paleolithic: Geissenklösterle - 37,000-33,000 BC
- Present in Central Europe, presently Germany
- Sophisticated and naturalistic statuettes of animal (mammoth, feline, bear, bison) and even human figures
- Carved from mammoth ivory
[edit] Gravettian
[edit] First Discovered
- La Gravette (Dordogne, France)
[edit] Chronology
- ca. 27,000-21,000 BC
[edit] Geography
- Widespread distribution over Eurasia
[edit] Major cultural centers
- Southwest France
- Northern Italy (Grimaldi)
- Central Europe (Dolni Vestonice, Pavlov)
[edit] Architecture
- Mammoth huts
[edit] Material Culture
- Upper Paleolithic-type lithic industry
- Gravette Points, etc.
[edit] Other Economic Activities
- Pyrotechnology
- Basketry
[edit] Complex mortuary practices
- Dolni Vestonice triple burial
[edit] Artisitic Expression
Types:
- Animal figurines
- Female figurines ("Venuses")
- Parietal art
Animal figuring characteristics: Animals most frequently depicted are dangerous species (felines and bears), continuing Aurignacian tradition
- In Moravia, 67 animal statuettes recorded:
- 21 bears
- 11 small carnivores
- 9 felines
- 8 mammoths
- 6 birds
- 6 horses
- 4 rhinoceroses
- caprid
- 1 cervid
By contrast, Magdalenian animal statuettes from the same region show very different patterns (N=139):
- 56 horses, 44 bisons
- 9 bears,
- 2 felines,
- 1 mammoth
- 2 birds
- 1 caprid, 1 cervid
- 5 miscellaneous, 18 indeterminates
- No rhinoceros
Dangerous animals represent only 10% of total
Female figurine characteristics: Widespread distribution over Europe and Russia; except Spain where no evidence of Venuses
- Raw materials:
- ivory
- clay
- Various types of research performed by anthropologists:
- technological
- stylistic
- details of clothing, ornaments
- chronological/geographical
- interpretational
- Most of baked clay figurines found fragmented
- Lack of skill or deliberate action? Intentional fracturation through heating process
- Fragmented figurines were intended products Involved and by-products of ritual ceremonies rather than art objects
Parietal art characteristics: From 21 sites, a list of 47 animals identified:
- 9 ibexes
- 9 cervids
- 7 horses
- 4 mammoths
- 3 bovids
- 1 megaceros
- 1 salmon
- 10 indeterminates
Dangerous animals (rhinoceros, bear, lion) depicted during the Gravettian do not constitute more than 11% of determinable animals:
- 3 times less than in Aurignacian period);
- yet still higher frequency than during Solutrean and Magdalenian
Strong preponderance of hunted animals, with horse very widely dominant
- Example: Gargas with a list of 148 animals identified:
- 36.5% bovids (bison and aurochs)
- 29% horses
- 10% ibexes
- 6% cervids
- 4% mammoths
- 8% indeterminates
- (2 birds, 1 wild boar)
- No feline, rhinoceros, bear
[edit] Late Upper Paleolithic Cultures
[edit] Solutrean
[edit] First Discovered
- Solutré (NE France)
[edit] Chronology
- ca. 21,000-18,000 BC
[edit] Geography
- Limited distribution over SW France and Iberia
[edit] Material Culture
- Upper Paleolithic-type lithic industry
- Heat Treatment, Pressure Retouch
- Solutrean points: bifacially retouched leaf points, shouldered points, etc.
- burins, endscrapers, etc.
[edit] Settlements
- Some sedentary groups (Fourneau-du-Diable)
- Long stratigraphic sequences
[edit] Human remains
- Complex mortuary practices:
- No evidence of burials, but manipulation of dead (e.g., reuse of skull: Le Placard)
[edit] Artistic expression
Types:
- Engraved limestone blocks
- Engraved Bones
- Parietal art
Characteristics:
- Various techniques applied: painting, engraving
- Distribution and amount of animals represented in tradition of Late Upper Paleolithic: mainly horses and bisons
- Several novelties from Gravettian:
- First association of parietal art with occupation sites [Low-relief scupture on blocks detached from walls];
- Representation of animals in line or opposed
[edit] Magdelenian
[edit] First Discovered
- La Madeleine (Dordogne, France)
[edit] Chronology
- ca. 19,000-10,000 BC
[edit] Geography
- Widespread distribution over Eurasia
[edit] Major cultural centers
- Southwest France (Charente, Dordogne, Pyrénées)
- Northeast Spain
- Central Europe
[edit] Material Culture
- Upper Paleolithic-type lithic industry
- Magdalenian blades, burins, etc.
- Rich bone tool industry (harpoons)
[edit] Complex mortuary practices
- Children burials
[edit] Artistic expression
Types:
- Raw Materials: Great diversity (limestone cave walls and slabs, sandstone, shale, bone, ivory, clay, etc.)
- Techniques: All techniques employed: Engraving, Sculpture, Molding, Cutting, Drawing, Painting
- Both mobiliary and parietal arts present. Out of about 300 sites with parietal art, 250 are attributed to Magdalenian period.
- Types of Figurations:
- Animals (mainly horses and bisons)
- Humans (male and female)
- Hands (positive and negative)
- Signs (dots, lines