Emireh culture
File:Emireh-Point.jpg | |
Geographical range | Levant |
---|---|
Period | Upper Paleolithic |
Dates | circa 30000 BCE |
Preceded by | Mousterian |
Followed by | Antelian |
The Stone Age |
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↑ before Homo (Pliocene) |
|
↓ Chalcolithic |
Emirian culture was a culture that existed in the Levant (Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine) between the Middle Paleolithic and the Upper Paleolithic periods.
Emirian culture apparently developed from the local Mousterian without rupture, keeping numerous elements of the Levalloise-Mousterian, together with the locally typical Emireh point. The Emireh point is the type tool of stage one of the Upper Paleolithic, first identified in the Emirian or Emireh culture.[1] Numerous stone blade tools were used, including curved knives similar to those found in the Chatelperronian culture of Western Europe.
The Emirian eventually evolved into the Antelian culture, still of Levalloise tradition but with some Aurignacian influences.
According to Dorothy Garrod, the Emireh point, known from several sites in Israel, is the hallmark of this culture.[2]
References
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Further reading
- M. H. Alimen and M. J. Steve, Historia Universal siglo XXI. Prehistoria. Siglo XXI Editores, 1970 (reviewed and corrected in 1994) (original German edition, 1966, titled Vorgeschichte). ISBN 84-323-0034-9
See also
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- ↑ Archaeology in Cultural Systems, Sally R. Binford, Lewish Roberts Binford