학술논문

Neanderthal Acculturation in Western Europe? A Critical Review of the Evidence and Its Interpretation 1
Document Type
research-article
Source
Current Anthropology, 1998 Feb . 39(S1), S1-S44.
Subject
Neanderthals
Bones
Acculturation
Humans
Paleoanthropology
Stone tools
Anatomy
Awls
Muses
Archaeology
Language
English
ISSN
00113204
15375382
Abstract
The presence of bone tools, personal ornaments, and apparently “modern” stone tools in European late Middle Paleolithic or pre‐Aurignacian Paleolithic contexts is generally interpreted as the result of the acculturation of final Neanderthal populations by anatomically modern humans. Analysis of the stratigraphic, chronological, and archaeological data from the key site of Grotte du Renne (Arcy‐sur‐Cure, France) shows that the notion of acculturation, as commonly understood, is inconsistent with the evidence. It is argued here that this site is not an exceptional case and is best explained by models of independent development that are supported by a reevaluation of Chãtelperronian technology and by the patterns of chronological and geographical distribution of Aurignacian, Chãtelperronian, Uluzzian, and late Mousterian settlements.