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1 isappeared from the region at the end of the Pleistocene.
2 he melting of the glaciers at the end of the Pleistocene.
3  and dry habitats that proliferated into the Pleistocene.
4 understanding of human evolution in terminal Pleistocene.
5 n Central and Northeast Asia during the Late Pleistocene.
6 n archaic human diaspora early in the Middle Pleistocene.
7 ciated with glacial terminations of the Late Pleistocene.
8 ate with human mobility through the terminal Pleistocene.
9 hy and history of climate change through the Pleistocene.
10  progenitor, probably in Beringia during the Pleistocene.
11 ital punishment on self-domestication in the Pleistocene.
12 -analogous vegetation structure in the Early Pleistocene.
13 35 ka, placing H. naledi in the later Middle Pleistocene.
14  in effective population size throughout the Pleistocene.
15 nages caused by sea-level changes during the Pleistocene.
16 te system of MIS 19 and the following Middle Pleistocene.
17 ly geographically partitioned throughout the Pleistocene.
18 p. were widespread across Eurasia during the Pleistocene.
19  in Italy to assess human mobility in Middle Pleistocene.
20 as mostly ice-covered during the mid-to-late Pleistocene.
21 od of climatic instability at the end of the Pleistocene.
22 ize is indicated to have occurred during the Pleistocene.
23 d this perception has been extended into the Pleistocene.
24 duction and a neopolyploidy event during the Pleistocene.
25 ch are estimated to have diverged during the Pleistocene.
26 te for salmon processing during the terminal Pleistocene.
27  re-distribution of fault activity since the Pleistocene.
28 ead across the Holarctic throughout the Late Pleistocene.
29 iversity (including endemism) since the Late Pleistocene.
30 s from a common ancestor dated to the Middle Pleistocene.
31 ppearance of the megafauna at the end of the Pleistocene.
32 to be from dates extending well into the mid-Pleistocene.
33 and eventual ice conditions beginning in the Pleistocene.
34 d across the Eurasian steppe during the Late Pleistocene.
35 line and continued until near the end of the Pleistocene.
36 to global glaciation oscillations during the Pleistocene.
37 larly for hominins of the Pliocene and early Pleistocene.
38 d settled by modern humans at the end of the Pleistocene.
39  nodes of Brachypodium and a very recent Mid-Pleistocene (0.9 Ma) time for the B. distachyon split.
40 species, that went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene [1-4].
41 ue record of onshore and offshore markers of Pleistocene ~100-ka climate cycles provides an outstandi
42                               Two early Late Pleistocene ( 105,000- to 125,000-year-old) crania from
43 ng to megafauna (>44 kg) extinctions in Late Pleistocene (126,000-12,000 years ago) Australia are hig
44 , most likely from East Asia during the Plio-Pleistocene (2-1Mya).
45 the best fossil records, three from the Late Pleistocene (~25 to 10 ka [1,000 y ago]) and one from th
46 vore families in the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene (3.6 to 1.05 Ma) from the Shungura Formation
47 f lineage that dwelled in Siberia during the Pleistocene.(3)(5) Previous studies have suggested that
48 nalyzed enamel of fossil teeth from the Late Pleistocene (38.4-13.5 ka) mammalian assemblage of the T
49 ondrial protein-coding genes, supports a mid-Pleistocene ( 630,000 years ago) divergence between the
50  place during the late Pliocene or the early Pleistocene, a time corresponding well with the common p
51 4 teragrams CH(4) per year at the end of the Pleistocene, about 11,600 years ago(8), but that period
52        The result suggests that later Middle Pleistocene Africa contained multiple contemporaneous ho
53                  As a result the recovery of Pleistocene-age human remains is extremely rare.
54 ree of congruent demographic response to the Pleistocene among codistributed taxa remains unknown.
55 uted across northern Eurasia during the Late Pleistocene and became extinct approximately 14 thousand
56 and the Caribbean coast(7-9) during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene epochs.
57 ty was lost during the climate shifts of the Pleistocene and has not recovered, despite the current h
58  the syrinx are geologically young (from the Pleistocene and Holocene (approximately 2.5 million year
59 range for copal (2.58 Ma-1760 AD), including Pleistocene and Holocene copals, and the novel term "Def
60 eneck experienced by bison at the end of the Pleistocene and includes the second bottleneck which occ
61 f the Andean lineages is limited to the Late Pleistocene and intimately associated with habitat contr
62 l competition for prey throughout the latest Pleistocene and largely irrespective of changing climate
63 orthern Great Plains bison from the terminal Pleistocene and throughout the Holocene to gain insight
64 son mitogenomes with ages that span the Late Pleistocene, and identified two waves of bison dispersal
65 xisted as at least two subspecies during the Pleistocene, and that lions and cave lions were distinct
66 l transitions were similar to the end of the Pleistocene, and that the large mammal genera survived u
67 mammals likely promoted co-occurrence in the Pleistocene, and their loss contributed to the modern as
68 e island was readily achieved throughout the Pleistocene, apparently ending at approximately 55 ka.
69 the second of which occurred during the Late Pleistocene, approximately 45-21 thousand y ago.
70 sent in both the sandy Holocene and gravelly Pleistocene aquifers and is also abstracted by the pumpi
71 cross central West Bengal, India, those from Pleistocene aquifers at depths >70 m beneath paleo-inter
72 hallow aquifers through exploitation of deep Pleistocene aquifers would improve if guided by an under
73 uld potentially explain the much sparser mid-Pleistocene archaeological record in the southern Kalaha
74 rn humans and more typically found in Middle Pleistocene archaic humans.
75 eistocene epoch and it is not until the Late Pleistocene (around 40,000-30,000 years ago) that this t
76 f soil invertebrates could have survived the Pleistocene at high elevation habitats protruding above
77 curs around 2.6 Ma to 2.8 Ma, near the lower Pleistocene boundary, terminates around 1.7 Ma, and peak
78 hort-lived and aborted close to the Pliocene-Pleistocene boundary.
79 ong species and emerged primarily during the Pleistocene, but divergence events were rarely concordan
80 as previously assigned broadly to the Middle Pleistocene by biostratigraphical correlation and ESR/U-
81 neled Scablands, which was carved during the Pleistocene by the catastrophic Missoula floods in easte
82 attributed to the combined influence of Plio-Pleistocene C(4) grassland expansion and pulses of aridi
83                                     The Late Pleistocene Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) super-eruption (So
84 and dogs, we resequenced the genomes of four Pleistocene canids from Northeast Siberia dated between
85  this question and the relationships between Pleistocene canids, present-day wolves, and dogs, we res
86  clues for understanding the ocean's role in Pleistocene carbon cycling.
87 n and additional pre-aged (Holocene and late-Pleistocene) carbon released from thawing permafrost soi
88 onally high rates of tooth fracture in large Pleistocene carnivorans imply intensified interspecific
89 h intervals, and consequently, we argue that Pleistocene carnivores had the capacity to, and likely d
90                      Lida Ajer is a Sumatran Pleistocene cave with a rich rainforest fauna associated
91                          We distinguish Late Pleistocene clades within the genus Homo based on ancien
92 nctional variants associated with periods of Pleistocene climate change, and Gradient Forest analysis
93 ize change across communities in response to Pleistocene climate cycles is likely rare in North Ameri
94 s nearly ice-free for extended periods under Pleistocene climate forcing.
95                As an evolutionary product of Pleistocene climate instability, humans possess broad ad
96 ting that a combination of human impacts and Pleistocene climate variability has modified the 20-mill
97 ubsequent genetic structure is attributed to Pleistocene climatic changes, in which sky-islands acted
98                                              Pleistocene climatic cycles altered species distribution
99 d, individualistic evolutionary responses to Pleistocene climatic fluctuations have shaped patterns i
100 ction of TRFs into and out of refugia during Pleistocene climatic fluctuations.
101 ge expansion of P. hwangshanensis during the Pleistocene climatic oscillations could have been the ca
102 Si cycle may present an important control on Pleistocene CO(2) concentrations.
103 ly genetic lineage that may stem from a late Pleistocene coastal migration into the Americas.
104 ehaviors of extinct cave bears living during Pleistocene cold periods at middle latitudes have been i
105    This relationship is highly contingent on Pleistocene connectivity, suggesting that biogeographic
106 s associated with the advance and retreat of Pleistocene continental glaciers.
107 amatic climatic oscillations following early Pleistocene cooling, so the timing and amplitude of chan
108 s of this uplift by measurements of elevated Pleistocene coral terraces.
109 eferred to Montemagrechiridae fam. nov. Nine Pleistocene corals with crescentic pits originate from F
110  atmospheric CO(2) increases associated with Pleistocene deglaciations.
111 strate that sequencing the proteome of Early Pleistocene dental enamel overcomes the limitations of p
112                     The survival of an Early Pleistocene dental enamel proteome in the subtropics fur
113 have been collected from the Early to Middle Pleistocene deposits of Java, Indonesia, forming the lar
114 y echoes the thermokarst-induced collapse of Pleistocene deposits.
115              This trend reversed in the late Pleistocene despite low CO2, suggesting an additional re
116 ologies in east Asia and its links to a Late Pleistocene dispersal of modern humans.
117          Results support a Pliocene to early Pleistocene divergence between Scalesia and the closest
118  west of Lake Turkana, which during the late Pleistocene/early Holocene period extended about 30 km b
119  to analyse the 3D geometry of a sequence of Pleistocene emerged marine terraces associated with flex
120 a Levallois component during the late Middle Pleistocene epoch and it is not until the Late Pleistoce
121 s occupied the Tibetan Plateau in the Middle Pleistocene epoch and successfully adapted to high-altit
122 nd global environmental perturbations as the Pleistocene epoch ended and transitioned into the Holoce
123  relationships between hominins of the Early Pleistocene epoch in Eurasia, such as Homo antecessor, a
124 eral extinct species of the Early and Middle Pleistocene epoch remains contentious.
125 ed environments of Southeast Asia during the Pleistocene epoch(1).
126 nships of the Eurasian Rhinocerotidae of the Pleistocene epoch(7-9), using the proteome of dental ena
127  most endemic species have evolved recently (Pleistocene epoch), during a period of recurrent sea-lev
128 ecular evolution further back into the Early Pleistocene epoch, beyond the currently known limits of
129                             During the early Pleistocene epoch, ice cover in East Greenland was dynam
130                          Near the end of the Pleistocene epoch, populations of the woolly mammoth (Ma
131 later in the fossil record during the Middle Pleistocene epoch, such as Homo sapiens, are highly deba
132 , an archaeological site from the early late Pleistocene epoch, where in situ hammerstones and stone
133 hat inhabited Eurasia in the Middle and Late Pleistocene epoch.
134 species diversified in the Pliocene to early Pleistocene era, and occurred introgressive hybridisatio
135 iven by either Neogene cooling or increasing Pleistocene erosion rates.
136  New evidence is presented of explosive Late Pleistocene eruptions in the Pacific Arc, currently undo
137 rismatic inhabitant of the frigid steppes of Pleistocene Eurasia.
138 onfirm the identification of the unique Late Pleistocene European fossil through ancient-DNA analyses
139 and identify the timing of two critical late Pleistocene events: wide-scale ecosystem change and regi
140 large-scale dispersals, was important in the Pleistocene evolutionary history of mammoths.
141   Together, these findings suggest that Plio-Pleistocene extension is not likely to have been accommo
142  the causes and consequences of the terminal Pleistocene extinction event.
143 rstanding of the full extent of the terminal Pleistocene extinction event.
144 a third possibility for at least some of the Pleistocene extinctions is that they occurred through ha
145 restrial megafauna to have survived the late Pleistocene extinctions.
146 ls constituted an important component in the Pleistocene faunal communities of South America.
147 ies are inferred to have been inherited from Pleistocene fluvial systems reactivated as tidal channel
148 ing and the dead among these successful Late Pleistocene foragers.
149                       Notably, distance from Pleistocene forest refugia is associated with the presen
150 ication of fossil biomineral proteins from a Pleistocene fossil invertebrate, the stony coral Orbicel
151  documented diversity in the European Middle Pleistocene fossil record.
152 day; 16 of these 27 species were recorded as Pleistocene fossils as well.
153                                      Two new Pleistocene fossils now provide unexpected evidence of a
154 f songbirds (Passeriformes) recorded as Late Pleistocene fossils on the Bahamian island of Abaco-the
155 tebrates, e.g. the hypertelic antlers of the Pleistocene giant deer Megaloceros giganteus.
156 lations that present a continuously existing Pleistocene GIS.
157 xide a delayed climate amplifier in the late Pleistocene glacial cycles.
158 an permafrost largely formed during the late Pleistocene glacial period and shrank in the Holocene Th
159 ought, highlighting the role of at least one Pleistocene glacial refugium, perhaps on the Red Sea pla
160                                              Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles are correlated w
161 al endemic species appeared to have survived Pleistocene glaciation in the eastern Palearctic, much o
162                                              Pleistocene glaciations have profoundly affected pattern
163                                              Pleistocene glaciations played an additional geomorpholo
164 kely location of carbon sequestration during Pleistocene glaciations.
165 ate swings played a key role in shaping Late Pleistocene global population distributions, whereas mil
166 elta(18)O, and delta(2)H show that the As in Pleistocene groundwater beneath deep paleo-channels is r
167 arkedly similar to that associated with Late Pleistocene H. floresiensis.
168  and among the latter, connection during the Pleistocene had an important impact.
169 st that the climatic oscillations during the Pleistocene have driven an insect-plant co-evolutionary
170 ommunities, and what changes occurred at the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary that might have led to tho
171 fected the local ecosystem in Texas over the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary, but climate change on its
172      Bone modifications among Ethiopian Plio-Pleistocene hominid and faunal remains at Asa Issie, Mak
173              However, such claims about Plio-Pleistocene hominids rely mostly on very small assemblag
174 east Mongolia is, to our knowledge, the only Pleistocene hominin fossil found in the country.
175 blages that have a central role in models of Pleistocene hominin morphology, dispersal and divergence
176 cent chronological studies on Chinese Middle Pleistocene hominin sites, indicate that the time span f
177 sights into the genetic relationship between Pleistocene hominins and modern humans.
178 sister lineage to subsequent Middle and Late Pleistocene hominins, including modern humans, Neanderth
179 attributed to a population ancestral to Late Pleistocene Homo floresiensis.
180 g into Asia met Neandertals, Denisovans, mid-Pleistocene Homo, and possibly H. floresiensis, with som
181 therium sp. samples, including the only Late Pleistocene Homotherium sample from Eurasia [4].
182 WSL, equids constitute a perplexing group of Pleistocene horses endemic to North America.
183  evolution in eastern Africa during the Plio-Pleistocene; however, this hypothesis remains inadequate
184 lex demographic processes that characterized Pleistocene human evolution and modern human presence in
185 strong implications for our understanding of Pleistocene human evolution in Africa.
186      This morphological combination reflects Pleistocene human evolutionary patterns in general biolo
187 cavations and analyses of more than 400 Late Pleistocene human footprints from Engare Sero, Tanzania.
188   These results suggest that two late Middle Pleistocene human groups were present at this site-an ea
189                Although Late and even Middle Pleistocene human presence has been recently documented
190                    Although a rich record of Pleistocene human-associated archaeological assemblages
191 h degrees of morphological diversity in Late Pleistocene humans from East Asia.
192 d sexually divided foraging behavior in Late Pleistocene humans.
193          Such data suggest that, by the Late Pleistocene, humans had begun to engage in activities th
194  matrilineal genetic continuity between late Pleistocene hunter-gatherer groups and present-day popul
195 litating the occupation of this site by Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers.
196 rom the warm climates of the Pliocene to the Pleistocene ice ages between 3.2 and 2.6 million years a
197  studies have suggested that during the late Pleistocene ice ages, surface-deep exchange was somehow
198 naledi, survived into the later parts of the Pleistocene in Africa, and indicate a much younger age f
199 Neandertals by modern humans during the Late Pleistocene in Europe.
200                               The end of the Pleistocene in North America saw the extinction of 38 ge
201 last interglacial period (MIS 5e; early late Pleistocene), indicating that humans with manual dexteri
202 ts confirm the presence of Meganthropus as a Pleistocene Indonesian hominid distinct from Pongo, Giga
203  in hunter-gatherer mobility during the Late Pleistocene influenced settlement ecologies, altered hum
204 sults furnished the first evidence for major Pleistocene interglacial refugia and a latitudinal effec
205                                         Late Pleistocene interglacials provide potential case example
206 data indicate that during one of the warmest Pleistocene interglacials, the ice sheet margin at the W
207                                   The Middle Pleistocene is a crucial time period for studying human
208 BG) since the late Miocene to the end of the Pleistocene is hereby newly defined, and is characterize
209          To estimate the potential impact of Pleistocene large carnivores, we use both historic and m
210 Cave, we retrieved Denisovan DNA in a Middle Pleistocene layer near the bottom of the stratigraphy.
211 of a human deciduous incisor from the Middle Pleistocene layers of the Isernia La Pineta site (Italy)
212 of morphological diversity among Late Middle Pleistocene (LMP) African hominins is largely unknown, t
213 ope Stage 11), is one of the very few Middle Pleistocene localities to have provided a fossil hominin
214 ial extinctions and declines during the Late Pleistocene (LP) due to prehistoric human impacts.
215                            Frozen permafrost Pleistocene mammal carcasses with soft tissue remains ar
216 n seven out of nine, radiocarbon-dated, Late Pleistocene mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) and bison (B
217 ting global phylogeny confirms that the Late Pleistocene mammoth population comprised three distinct
218                                A late Middle Pleistocene mandible from Baishiya Karst Cave (BKC) on t
219 es in eastern Africa during the Pliocene and Pleistocene may have been decoupled from aridity.
220 tions of a few large vertebrates in the late Pleistocene may have resulted in the coextinction of num
221 hesize that nitrogen cycling in the Pliocene-Pleistocene Mediterranean resembled modern, highly strat
222 tent with the sedimentary record of Pliocene-Pleistocene Mediterranean sapropel events.
223 ch were key characteristics for predation on Pleistocene megafauna [5].
224 ong recovery times directly preceded the end-Pleistocene megafauna extinction, resulting in regional
225 and accumulation of fuel related to the late Pleistocene megafauna extinction, which took place in th
226 t beaver was once one of the most widespread Pleistocene megafauna in North America.
227            The last remnants of the European Pleistocene megafauna that survived into the Holocene we
228 ange, and contributed to extinctions of late Pleistocene megafauna.
229 d representatives of the now largely extinct Pleistocene megafauna.
230 s of a small population of people on extinct Pleistocene megafauna.
231  tracked community structure through the end-Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in North America.
232 on hotspots, and the location of the largest Pleistocene megafaunal extinction, South America is cent
233 y and/or plant resources) after the terminal Pleistocene megafaunal extinction.
234 ctic large carnivores that survived the Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions, responding to that p
235 logical and ecological aspects of both Upper Pleistocene modern humans (UPMHs) and Neandertals provid
236  earliest well-defined evidence of humans in Pleistocene North America.
237  was only a single species of middle to late Pleistocene NWSL equid, and demonstrate that it falls ou
238 ingle specimens with pits come from the late Pleistocene of Cuba and the late Pliocene of Florida, al
239                              During the late Pleistocene of North America ( approximately 36,000 to 1
240 hat population structure existed in the late Pleistocene of North America with Shuka Kaa on a differe
241 ia auaritae, recovered from the lower-middle Pleistocene of the La Palma island.
242 her North American individuals from the late Pleistocene or early Holocene (i.e., Anzick-1 and Kennew
243 ic data support the hypothesis that all Late Pleistocene (or post-Villafrancian) Homotherium should b
244 s to assess the genetic processes underlying Pleistocene palaeontological patterns.
245 hat the Earth system has operated under late Pleistocene pCO(2) levels for an extended period.
246 e of information for the Miocene through the Pleistocene periods, due to the abundant faunal remains
247 the southern latitudes of Europe during Late Pleistocene periods.
248 in permafrost systems, soil cores spanning a Pleistocene permafrost chronosequence (19,000, 27,000, a
249                 Here we investigate the late Pleistocene population history of northeastern Siberia t
250 nstrates the extreme variability of terminal Pleistocene populations in China and the possibility of
251 ck and gray whale lineages and that multiple Pleistocene populations were undertaking migrations of a
252 Myr) as compared with other Lower and Middle Pleistocene populations.
253 lope Drift is dominated by contourite mud of Pleistocene-Recent age, substantially younger than previ
254 ibuted to a better understanding of the Late Pleistocene record in Asia.
255 primitive hominin species discovered in Late Pleistocene sediments at Liang Bua (Flores, Indonesia),
256 ina is a cavity infilled by at least 25 m of Pleistocene sediments.
257 ion during the Paleolithic, as well as wider Pleistocene sequences across Eurasia.
258                                Instead, each Pleistocene Siberian canid branched off the lineage that
259 .(3)(5) Previous studies have suggested that Pleistocene Siberian canids can be classified into two g
260                   We detected gene flow from Pleistocene Siberian wolves, but not modern American wol
261  changes in global climate at the end of the Pleistocene significantly impacted ecosystems across Nor
262       Recent excavations at the early Middle Pleistocene site of Mata Menge in the So'a Basin of cent
263                                     The Late Pleistocene sites feature 51 resident species that have
264 oothed cat Homotherium reveals that the late Pleistocene species from Europe and North America were t
265 tely adapted to the "ice-age" climate of the Pleistocene steppe [4, 5].
266 could have had bottom-up effects in the Late Pleistocene steppe-tundra ecosystem.
267 assemblages of multiple and diverse types of Pleistocene "symbolic" artifacts were entirely unknown f
268  mountain streams above the elevation of the Pleistocene terminal moraine retain floodplain sediment
269 er, the lack of firm age estimates for older Pleistocene terminations confounds attempts to test the
270 of greater mtDNA diversity during the Middle Pleistocene than in later periods.
271                            By the end of the Pleistocene, the Sundaland corridor was submerged, and p
272 esian age-depth model that brackets the late Pleistocene through early Holocene, we analyzed and quan
273 s within the northern hemisphere during Late Pleistocene time ( 46-11 ka B.P.).
274 e radiocarbon calibration curve and the Late Pleistocene time-scale at ca. 40 ka.
275 l strike-slip fault system active since Late Pleistocene time.
276 any studies of Olduvai Gorge during Pliocene-Pleistocene times have revealed the presence of precessi
277 n and carving glacial landforms down to Plio-Pleistocene times.
278 arge effective population size over the Late Pleistocene to Holocene.
279 e of changes in human mobility from the Late Pleistocene to the Iron Age.
280  transfer and sediment storage from the late Pleistocene to the present day.
281 extreme northeast of Eurasia during the Late Pleistocene-to-Holocene warming events.
282 cally significant differences across the mid-Pleistocene Transition (ca. 1.2-0.8 Ma), suggesting that
283                                      The mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) is widely recognized as a s
284 , whereas C(3) grasses decline after the mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT, c.
285                               During the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT; 1,200-800 kya), Earth's orb
286 that interglacial vegetation during the Plio-Pleistocene transition mainly reflects conditions of the
287 ably stalled before the beginning of the mid-Pleistocene transition, and pre-dated the increase in th
288 lobal deep water mass properties at the Plio-Pleistocene transition, as Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW)
289 ation is the most obvious result of the Plio-Pleistocene transition.
290 quasi-100,000-year glacial cycles at the mid-Pleistocene transition.
291  magma-assisted rifting associated with Plio-Pleistocene volcanism.
292 Ellsworth-Whitmore uplands may have survived Pleistocene warm periods.
293 ulation expansion during the early to middle Pleistocene was followed by decline.
294 logenetic break possibly dating to the Early Pleistocene was inferred between the African and Asian L
295 here it is commonly thought to represent pre-Pleistocene weathering possibly associated with landscap
296  such precipitates were abundant in the late Pleistocene, whereas present-day sedimentation is domina
297 sibly promoted by low sea levels during Plio-Pleistocene, which further explain differences in specie
298 ages in Argentina began during or before the Pleistocene, which is hard to reconcile with the hypothe
299 n occurred in the deep oceans during the Mid Pleistocene, with a loss of over 100 species (20%) of se
300 ns cluster with the two previously sequenced Pleistocene wolves, which are genetically more similar t

 
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