The first modern humans at Niah, c. 50,000-35,000 years ago
Reynolds, T; Barker, Graeme William; Barton, Huw; Cranbrook, Earl of; Farr, Lucy; Hunt, Chris; Kealhofer, Lisa; Paz, Victor; Piper, Philip; Szabo, Katherine
Description
loped in Africa and then spread across the globe, or whether they had also developed outside Africa from antecedent hominin populations such as Homo erectus (Brauer 1992; Trinkaus 2005). Questions about modern human adaptation and ecology were also significant given the debates about whether the rainforest was a limiting factor in the spread of humans and whether adaptation to it has only been a very recent, probably Holocene, event (Bailey & Headland 1991; Bailey et al. 1989; Brosius 1991;...[Show more]
Collections | ANU Research Publications |
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Date published: | 2013 |
Type: | Book chapter |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1885/49569 |
Book Title: | Rainforest foraging and farming in Island Southeast Asia |
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File | Description | Size | Format | Image |
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01_Reynolds_The_first_modern_humans_at_2013.pdf | 353.22 kB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy | |
02_Reynolds_The_first_modern_humans_at_2013.pdf | 2.54 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy | |
03_Reynolds_The_first_modern_humans_at_2013.pdf | 4.74 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy | |
04_Reynolds_The_first_modern_humans_at_2013.pdf | 6.63 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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