Lithic techno-complexes in Italy from 50 to 39 thousand years BP: an overview of lithic technological changes across the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic boundary
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2019
abstract:
Defining the processes involved in the technical/cultural shifts from the Late Middle to the Early Upper
Palaeolithic in Europe (~50-39 thousand years BP) is one of the most important tasks facing prehistoric studies.
Apart from the technological diversity generally recognised as belonging to the latter part of the Middle
Palaeolithic, some assemblages showing original technological traditions (i.e. Initial Upper Palaeolithic:
Bohunician, Bachokirian; so called transitional industries: Châtelperronian, Szeletian, Lincombian-Ranisian-
Jerzmanowician, Uluzzian; Early Upper Palaeolithic: Protoaurignacian, Early Aurignacian) first appear during
this interval.
Explaining such technological changes is a crucial step in order to understand if they were the result of the
arrival of new populations, the result of parallel evolution, or of long-term processes of cultural and biological
exchanges.
In this debate Italy plays a pivotal role, due to its geographical position between eastern and western
Mediterranean Europe as well as to it being the location of several sites showing Late Mousterian, Uluzzian and
Protoaurignacian evidence distributed across the Peninsula.
Our study aims to provide a synthesis of the available lithic evidence from this key area through a review of
the evidence collected from a number of reference sites. The main technical features of the Late Mousterian, the
Uluzzian and the Protoaurignacian traditions are examined from a diachronic and spatial perspective.
Our overview allows the identification of major differences in the technological behaviour of these populations,
making it possible to propose a number of specific working hypotheses on the basis of which further
studies can be carried out.
This study presents a detailed comparative study of the whole corpus of the lithic production strategies
documented during this interval, and crucial element thus emerge: 1. In the Late Mousterian tools were manufactured
with great attention being paid to the production phases and with great investment in inizializing managing core convexities; 2. In contrast, Uluzzian lithic production proceeded with less careful management of
the first phases of debitage, mainly obtaining tool morphologies by retouching. 3. In the Protoaurignacian the
production is carefully organized and aimed at obtaining laminar blanks (mainly bladelets) usually marginally
retouched.
These data are of primary importance in order to assess the nature of the "transition" phenomenon in Italy,
thus contributing to the larger debate about the disappearance of Neandertals and the arrival of early Modern
Humans in Europe.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Late Mousterian Uluzzian Protoaurignacian Lithic technology Italy
List of contributors:
Aguiari, Federica; Badino, Federica
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