ANTHROPOLOGIE
International Journal of Human Diversity and Evolution
 
Coverage: 1923-1941 (Vols. I-XIX) & 1962-2025 (Vols. 1-63)
ISSN 0323-1119 (Print)
ISSN 2570-9127 (Online)
Journal Impact Factor 0.2
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Full text of article
'Šída P, Neruda P, Přichystal A, Eigner J, Rmoutilová R, Velemínský P, 2025: ARTEFACTS ASSOCIATED WITH THE EARLY MODERN HUMAN REMAINS FROM ZLATÝ KŮŇ HILL, CZECH REPUBLIC. Anthropologie (Brno) 63, 3: 153-170'.
 
Abstract
In the early 1950s, the bones of AMH Zlatý kůň 1 were discovered alongside a small collection of artefacts deep within the Koněprusy Caves system. Modern genetic research and dating techniques have placed this individual at the beginning of the modern human penetration of Europe, around 45,000 years ago. The small artefact assemblage consisted of six pieces of chipped stone industry, seven bones bearing traces of human impacts, and foreign seashell, which originated from either the Tertiary sediments of the Alpine Foredeep or the Mediterranean Sea. While the assemblage is not significant, it does not contain typical features of the younger, more evolved Aurignacian; rather, general analogies can be found in the Lincomb-Ranis-Jerzmanowice complex, which is documented at the closely related Ranis site.
 
Keywords
Anatomically modern humans – Early Upper Palaeolithic – Lincomb-Ranis-Jerzmanowice complex – Central Europe – Artefacts
 
DOI
https://doi.org/10.26720/anthro.25.09.15.1
 
 
 
 

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