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"Erratum: Addendum: FosSahul 2.0, an updated database for the Late Quat" by Katharina J. Peters, Frédérik Saltré et al.

"Erratum: Addendum: FosSahul 2.0, an updated database for the Late Quat" by Katharina J. Peters, Frédérik Saltré et al.
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Late Quaternary , தாமதமாக குவாட்டர்னரி ,

Early human impacts and ecosystem reorganization in southern-central Africa


55). The primary aim was to understand the subsurface distribution of artifacts and fan deposits across the larger landscape. Artifacts are typically deeply buried within the Chitimwe Beds in all places except at the margins, where erosion has begun to remove the top part of the deposit. During informal survey, two people walked across Chitimwe Beds that appear as mapped features on Government of Malawi geological maps. As these people encountered the shoulders of Chitimwe Bed deposits, they began to walk along the margins where they could observe artifacts eroding from the deposits. By placing excavations slightly (3 to 8 m) upslope from actively eroding artifacts, excavations could reveal their in situ locations relative to their containing sediments, without the necessity of laterally extensive excavations. Test pits were emplaced so that they would be 200- to 300-m distant from the next-nearest pit and thus capture the variation across Chitimwe Bed deposits and the artifacts t ....

United States , France General , South Africa , Lake Malawi , Malawi General , Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft , African Heritage Ltd , Purdue University , Malawi Ministry Of Youth , Emory University , Geoarchaeology Laboratory , National Geographic , University Of Queensland Archaeological Field School , Australian Research Council Discovery Project , Museum Centre , Korean Research Foundation Global Network Grant , Canadian Social Sciences , Catholic University Of Malawi , International Code For Phytolith Nomenclature , Centre For Early Sapiens Behaviour Sapien , Research Council Of Norway , Partnership Grant Program No , Waitt Foundation , Us Department Of Agriculture , International Continental Scientific Drilling Program , University Of Georgia ,

What ancient creatures that lived in India tell about evolution and extinction


Equus namadicus, alongside other great beasts that roamed the Indian subcontinent.
Modern humans had arrived by then on the Indian subcontinent from Africa but these four large mammals stuck around in the region for at least 20,000 years after their arrival. A low-magnitude extinction began about 30,000 years ago when some megafaunal species, such as the giant elephants, hippopotamus and zebra-like horse, started disappearing.
This is in contrast to the Americas, Europe and Australia where the arrival of humans (
Homo sapiens) have been implicated in more rapid, large scale megafauna extinctions such as those of woolly mammoths and sabre-toothed tigers.
Understudied region ....

Paul Martin , Advait Jukar , Vijay Sathe , Yale University , Department Of Anthropology , Deccan College , Research Institute Deemed University , Late Quaternary , Indian Subcontinent , Southeast Asia , East Africa , Deccan College Post Graduate , Research Institute , Deemed University , Quaternary Period , Last Datum , West Asia , South Asia , South East , Megafauna Extinctions , Ancient Humans , Homo Sapiens , Extinct Mammals , India Animals , பால் மார்டின் , விஜய் சத்தே ,