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Article Reference Late Stone Age human remains from Ishango (Democratic Republic of Congo): New insights on Late Pleistocene modern human diversity in Africa
Although questions of modern human origins and dispersal are subject to intense research within and outside Africa, the processes of modern human diversification during the Late Pleistocene are most often discussed within the context of recent human genetic data. This situation is due largely to the dearth of human fossil remains dating to the final Pleistocene in Africa and their almost total absence from West and Central Africa, thus limiting our perception of modern human diversification within Africa before the Holocene. Here, we present a morphometric comparative analysis of the earliest Late Pleistocene modern human remains from the Central African site of Ishango in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The early Late Stone Age layer (eLSA) of this site, dated to the Last Glacial Maximum (25–20 Ky), contains more than one hundred fragmentary human remains. The exceptional associated archaeological context suggests these remains derived from a community of hunter-fisher-gatherers exhibiting complex social and cognitive behaviors including substantial reliance on aquatic resources, development of fishing technology, possible mathematical notations and repetitive use of space, likely on a seasonal basis. Comparisons with large samples of Late Pleistocene and early Holocene modern human fossils from Africa and Eurasia show that the Ishango human remains exhibit distinctive characteristics and a higher phenotypic diversity in contrast to recent African populations. In many aspects, as is true for the inner ear conformation, these eLSA human remains have more affinities with Middle to early Late Pleistocene fossils worldwide than with extant local African populations. In addition, cross-sectional geometric properties of the long bones are consistent with archaeological evidence suggesting reduced terrestrial mobility resulting from greater investment in and use of aquatic resources. Our results on the Ishango human remains provide insights into past African modern human diversity and adaptation that are consistent with genetic theories about the deep sub-structure of Late Pleistocene African populations and their complex evolutionary history of isolation and diversification.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Latest Danian carbon isotope anomaly and associated environmental change in the southern Tethys (Nile Basin, Egypt).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference Le chien, un ami de 32000 ans
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference Le couloir de décrochement dextre de l'Ourthe dans l'axe Erezée - Saint-Hubert (Haute Ardenne, Belgique) et son implication sur le tracé des faille longitudinales
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference Le genre Centrantyx Fairmaire, 1884: révision des sous-genres Nitidocentrantyx Di Gennaro, 2012 et Vitticentrantyx Di Gennaro, 2012 (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae, Cetoniinae)
Located in Library / RBINS collections by external author(s)
Article Reference Le matérel anthropologique dans tous ses états : de la momie aux restes incinérés.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Le Paléogène de la coupe de la route Gan- Rébénacq (Aquitaine, France): stratigraphie intégrée, foraminifères et nannofossiles calcaires
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Incollection Reference Le réexamen des collections de Spy.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inbook Reference Lepidoptera Collection Curation and Data Management
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021
Article Reference Leptacodon dormaalensis (Mammalia, Lipotyphla), un nyctithère primitif de la transition Paléocène-Eocène de Belgique
Gypsonictops dormaalensis Quinet, 1964, décrit à l'origine à partir d'une unique P4/, est attribué au genre Leptucodon. L'espèce L. clormaalensis est redécrite sur la base de fragments mandibulaires et de dents jugales isolées provenant du Landénien supérieur de Dormaal (Belgique), près de la limite Paléocène-Eocéne. La comparaison du Leptacodon belge avec les autres espèces du genre indique que celui-ci est proche de l'espèce-îype L. tener Matthew & Granger, 1921 et semble posséder avec ce dernier. ainsi que L. rosei Gingerich, 1987, les caractères morphologiques les plus primitifs des nyctithères. La phylogénie du genre Leptucodon est également discutée et le genre Plc~gioctenodon Bown, 1979 est considéré comme synonyme du genre Leptacodon.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications