Humans and the environment in northern Baikal Siberia during the late Pleistocene / by E.M. Ineshin and A.V. Tetenkin ; translated by P.N. Hommel and N. Reynolds.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 1527500837
- 9781527500839
- Chelovek i prirodnai︠a︡ sreda severa Baĭkalʹskoĭ Sibiri v pozdnem pleistot︠s︡ene. English
- Prehistoric peoples -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia, Eastern
- Excavations (Archaeology) -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia, Eastern
- Paleoecology -- Siberia, Eastern -- Pleistocene
- Paleoanthropology -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia
- Paleolithic period -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia
- Paleoclimatology -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia, Eastern -- Pleistocene
- Fouilles (Archéologie) -- Russie -- Sibérie orientale
- Paléoanthropologie -- Russie -- Sibérie
- Paléoclimatologie -- Russie -- Sibérie orientale -- Pléistocène
- Archaeology
- Archaeological theory
- Landscape archaeology
- HISTORY -- Ancient -- General
- Excavations (Archaeology)
- Paleoanthropology
- Paleoclimatology
- Paleoecology
- Paleolithic period
- Pleistocene Geologic Epoch
- Prehistoric peoples
- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia
- Russia (Federation) -- Eastern Siberia
- From 10 thousand to 2 million years ago
- 930.1/20957 23
- GN772.22.R9 I6413 2017eb
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Originally published as Chelovek i prirodnaia sreda severa Ba?ikals̳ko?i Sibiri v pozdnem ple?istotsene: Novosibirsk : Nauka, 2010.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 323-337).
Translated from the Russian.
Print version record.
The site of Bol'shoy Yakor' I is one of the most intensively investigated Late Pleistocene sites in Eastern Siberia. This volume compiles and presents the outcome of more than three decades of research by the authors in English for the first time. The site, discussed in the context of the landscape that surrounds it and the wider archaeology of the region, is considered as a palimpsest of activity, built up through repeated episodes of activity. Through a detailed study of the techniques of lithic production and animal exploitation, these activities are refitted into the seasonal cycles of the.
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