نتایج جستجو برای: levant and jazireh

تعداد نتایج: 16827404  

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2009
Ella Tsahar Ido Izhaki Simcha Lev-Yadun Guy Bar-Oz

BACKGROUND The southern Levant (Israel, Palestinian Authority and Jordan) has been continuously and extensively populated by succeeding phases of human cultures for the past 15,000 years. The long human impact on the ancient landscape has had great ecological consequences, and has caused continuous and accelerating damage to the natural environment. The rich zooarchaeological data gathered at t...

2012
J. Lelieveld P. Hadjinicolaou E. Kostopoulou J. Chenoweth M. El Maayar C. Giannakopoulos C. Hannides M. A. Lange M. Tanarhte E. Tyrlis E. Xoplaki

The Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East (EMME) are likely to be greatly affected by climate change, associated with increases in the frequency and intensity of droughts and hot weather conditions. Since the region is diverse and extreme climate conditions already common, the impacts will be disproportional. We have analyzed long-term meteorological datasets along with regional climate mod...

Journal: :Journal of human evolution 2011
Mary C Stiner Avi Gopher Ran Barkai

The late Lower Paleolithic archaeofaunas of Qesem Cave in the southern Levant span 400-200 ka and associate with Acheulo-Yabrudian (mainly Amudian) industries. The large mammals are exclusively Eurasian in origin and formed under relatively cool, moist conditions. The zooarchaeological findings testify to large game hunting, hearth-centered carcass processing and meat sharing during the late Lo...

Journal: :Journal of human evolution 2011
Reuven Yeshurun Yossi Zaidner Véra Eisenmann Bienvenido Martínez-Navarro Guy Bar-Oz

The Southern Levant is a pivotal area for the study of hominin paleoecology during the Lower Paleolithic, because of its location on the out-of-Africa dispersal route and its significant ecological diversity. Important information has been gained by archaeofaunal studies, which usually reveal that exploitation of diverse Mediterranean environments with woodlands, marshes and lake margins, repre...

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2015
Karin Tamar Salvador Carranza Herman In den Bosch Roberto Sindaco Jiří Moravec Shai Meiri

The Levant region witnessed dramatic tectonic events and climatic fluctuations that changed the historical landscape of the area and consequently influenced the cladogenesis and distribution of the local biota. In this study we use information from two mitochondrial and two nuclear genes and species delimitation methods in order to obtain the first robust time-calibrated molecular phylogeny of ...

2011
Miki Ben-Dor Avi Gopher Israel Hershkovitz Ran Barkai

The worldwide association of H. erectus with elephants is well documented and so is the preference of humans for fat as a source of energy. We show that rather than a matter of preference, H. erectus in the Levant was dependent on both elephants and fat for his survival. The disappearance of elephants from the Levant some 400 kyr ago coincides with the appearance of a new and innovative local c...

2011
David Kaniewski Elise Van Campo Karel Van Lerberghe Tom Boiy Klaas Vansteenhuyse Greta Jans Karin Nys Harvey Weiss Christophe Morhange Thierry Otto Joachim Bretschneider

The 13(th) century BC witnessed the zenith of the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean civilizations which declined at the end of the Bronze Age, ∼3200 years ago. Weakening of this ancient flourishing Mediterranean world shifted the political and economic centres of gravity away from the Levant towards Classical Greece and Rome, and led, in the long term, to the emergence of the modern western civi...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Marjolein D Bosch Marcello A Mannino Amy L Prendergast Tamsin C O'Connell Beatrice Demarchi Sheila M Taylor Laura Niven Johannes van der Plicht Jean-Jacques Hublin

Modern human dispersal into Europe is thought to have occurred with the start of the Upper Paleolithic around 50,000-40,000 y ago. The Levantine corridor hypothesis suggests that modern humans from Africa spread into Europe via the Levant. Ksâr 'Akil (Lebanon), with its deeply stratified Initial (IUP) and Early (EUP) Upper Paleolithic sequence containing modern human remains, has played an impo...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Thomas E Levy Thomas Higham Christopher Bronk Ramsey Neil G Smith Erez Ben-Yosef Mark Robinson Stefan Münger Kyle Knabb Jürgen P Schulze Mohammad Najjar Lisa Tauxe

Recent excavations and high-precision radiocarbon dating from the largest Iron Age (IA, ca. 1200-500 BCE) copper production center in the southern Levant demonstrate major smelting activities in the region of biblical Edom (southern Jordan) during the 10th and 9th centuries BCE. Stratified radiocarbon samples and artifacts were recorded with precise digital surveying tools linked to a geographi...

2016
Gil Rilov

Even during the current biodiversity crisis, reports on population collapses of highly abundant, non-harvested marine species were rare until very recently. This is starting to change, especially at the warm edge of species' distributions where populations are more vulnerable to stress. The Levant basin is the southeastern edge of distribution of most Mediterranean species. Coastal water condit...

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