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1 y a modest decrease through the Middle Upper Paleolithic.
2 ant lineages entered Europe during the Upper Paleolithic.
3 extiles, basketry, and cordage, in the Upper Paleolithic.
4 se humans have inhabited this area since the Paleolithic.
5 etween the late Lower Paleolithic and Middle Paleolithic.
6 ights into the plant foods of the late Upper Paleolithic.
7 vity in the modern humans of the Early Upper Paleolithic.
8 yan Industry associated with the early Upper Paleolithic.
9 from across Europe extending from the Upper Paleolithic [11,000-33,000 calibrated years (Cal y) B.P.
12 sed for producing flour in Europe during the Paleolithic and about the origins of a food tradition pe
13 es increased abruptly during the late Middle Paleolithic and again during the Upper and Epi-Paleolith
14 ectile points, common to the Beringian Upper Paleolithic and Clovis, were made and used during pre-Cl
15 omic structure today dates back to the Upper Paleolithic and derives from a metapopulation that at ti
16 d two samples of early modern humans (Middle Paleolithic and earlier Upper Paleolithic) provides litt
17 ring persons in the highest quintiles of the Paleolithic and Mediterranean diet scores relative to th
19 se-wear analyses suggest that both the Upper Paleolithic and Middle Paleolithic hominids at these sit
21 poor preservation of perishable artifacts in Paleolithic and Neolithic contexts makes them difficult
23 ities and differences to both Siberian Upper Paleolithic and North American Paleoindian features.
24 erstanding of the emergence of the Mid-Upper Paleolithic and the complex suite of burial behaviors th
26 of scores for 2 proposed diet patterns, the "Paleolithic" and the Mediterranean, with incident, spora
27 tion size growth is more recent (e.g., upper Paleolithic) and that some of the loci have experienced
33 t of archaeological chronologies and, in the Paleolithic, blur the dating of such key events as the d
34 We also attempted to date six early Upper Paleolithic bone points from stratigraphic units G1, Fd/
35 nted than those observed in Middle and Upper Paleolithic cases in the Levant, suggesting that more (s
40 ndings suggest that greater adherence to the Paleolithic diet pattern and greater adherence to the Me
43 er Paleolithic early modern, to Middle Upper Paleolithic early modern hominids, with the Levantine Mi
44 y modern hominids, with the Levantine Middle Paleolithic early modern humans being a gracile anomalou
45 s from Eurasian late archaic, to Early Upper Paleolithic early modern, to Middle Upper Paleolithic ea
46 that the 7R allele arose prior to the upper Paleolithic era (approximately 40000-50000 years ago).
47 over time show that densities in early Upper Paleolithic Europe were similar to those in sub-Saharan
49 nal of Bronze Age expansion, but evidence of Paleolithic expansions in all populations except the Saa
51 t that both the Upper Paleolithic and Middle Paleolithic hominids at these sites were broad-based for
52 (Austria) is well known for its Early Upper Paleolithic horizons, which are among the oldest in Euro
53 ns of personal ornament manufacture by Upper Paleolithic humans in western Asia, comparable in age to
54 hominids, Neanderthals, early and late Upper Paleolithic humans, and Holocene humans supports the dic
55 ional adaptations seen in the hands of Upper Paleolithic humans, it is concluded that the Skhul/Qafze
59 P is later than the start of the first Upper Paleolithic in Europe, thus questioning the Levantine co
60 red times of collapse and recovery are Upper Paleolithic, in agreement with archaeological evidence o
61 ally and temporally diverse sample of Middle Paleolithic juveniles, including Neanderthals, to assess
64 ations in Europe indicates extreme levels of Paleolithic lineages in a region encompassing Serbia, Bo
72 n western Eurasia this transition, the Upper Paleolithic, occurred about 45,000 years ago, but many o
73 wo sites of the Neandertal-associated Middle Paleolithic of Iberia, dated to as early as approximatel
74 ope by anatomically modern humans during the Paleolithic, or to latter Near Eastern Neolithic input i
75 ta show that the initial appearance of Upper Paleolithic ornament technologies was essentially simult
76 dates suggest a co-occurrence of early Upper Paleolithic osseous artifacts, particularly split-based
77 ves from a plethora of sources including the Paleolithic "Out of Africa" migrations, the exodus of Ne
78 lucidate the interactions between indigenous Paleolithic people and agricultural colonists from the F
79 xploitation of certain types of flora helped Paleolithic people understand the properties of these pl
80 uman colonization of Europe during the Upper Paleolithic period, followed by the recent mixing of Afr
87 humans (Middle Paleolithic and earlier Upper Paleolithic) provides little difference across the sampl
88 ratified Initial (IUP) and Early (EUP) Upper Paleolithic sequence containing modern human remains, ha
89 that the Kalash share genetic drift with the Paleolithic Siberian hunter-gatherers and might represen
90 an order of magnitude older than documented Paleolithic sites in Siberia and is important for unders
92 performed on a sample of artifacts from the Paleolithic sites of Starosele (40,000-80,000 years BP)
93 he most abundant type of cultural remains at Paleolithic sites, yet their function is often poorly un
101 been a crossroads for several cultures since Paleolithic times and the Balkans, specifically, would h
103 sence of modern humans associated with Upper Paleolithic toolkits in the Levant predates all modern h
105 l and development during the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition have been attributed to massive v
108 and Middle Pleistocene, the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition, and cultural loss in Holocene Ta
109 ngest morphometric affinities are with Upper Paleolithic (UP) Eurasians rather than recent, geographi
110 on from the Middle Paleolithic (MP) to Upper Paleolithic (UP) is marked by the replacement of late Ne
111 HG strategy was already present in the Upper Paleolithic, we used complete genome sequences from Sung
112 e that human populations of the early Middle Paleolithic were exceptionally small and highly disperse
114 Eastern Europe reveal a spotted landscape of paleolithic Y chromosomes, undermining continental-wide
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