COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Department of Archaeology - Garrod seminar series > The 'Wood Age' at Kalambo Falls, Zambia
The 'Wood Age' at Kalambo Falls, ZambiaAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Rachel Ballantyne. Direct evidence of Palaeolithic wood working rarely survives in the archaeological record, especially in the tropics. The Early Stone Age African site of Kalambo Falls, Zambia offers a rare and exceptional context for the preservation of wood. Excavations in 2019 recovered wood tools and other plant remains from waterlogged deposits, along with stone tools (Acheulean, Sangoan). Each of three phases of occupation preserves wood tools with the sequence dated by luminescence (post-IR IRSL ). This talk is part of the Department of Archaeology - Garrod seminar series series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsCancer talks Centre for Research in Contemporary ProblemsOther talksTitle TBC An analogue of the Milnor conjecture for the de Rham-Witt complex in characteristic 2 Modern historiography of applied mathematics: content, methodology, deficits Apartheid Science and American Capitalism from Black-Scholes to the DotCom Boom Drosophila in context: evolution, toxins, and behaviour On the Reception of Christian Thomasius's Political Thought in Protestant Northern Germany |