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Featured researches published by Alison Pereira.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A human deciduous tooth and new 40Ar/39Ar dating results from the Middle Pleistocene archaeological site of Isernia La pineta, southern Italy

Carlo Peretto; Julie Arnaud; Jacopo Moggi-Cecchi; Giorgio Manzi; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Christophe Falguères; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Dominique Grimaud-Hervé; Claudio Berto; Benedetto Sala; Giuseppe Lembo; Brunella Muttillo; Rosalia Gallotti; Ursula Thun Hohenstein; Carmela Vaccaro; Mauro Coltorti; Marta Arzarello

Isernia La Pineta (south-central Italy, Molise) is one of the most important archaeological localities of the Middle Pleistocene in Western Europe. It is an extensive open-air site with abundant lithic industry and faunal remains distributed across four stratified archaeosurfaces that have been found in two sectors of the excavation (3c, 3a, 3s10 in sect. I; 3a in sect. II). The prehistoric attendance was close to a wet environment, with a series of small waterfalls and lakes associated to calcareous tufa deposits. An isolated human deciduous incisor (labelled IS42) was discovered in 2014 within the archaeological level 3 coll (overlying layer 3a) that, according to new 40Ar/39Ar measurements, is dated to about 583–561 ka, i.e. to the end of marine isotope stage (MIS) 15. Thus, the tooth is currently the oldest human fossil specimen in Italy; it is an important addition to the scanty European fossil record of the Middle Pleistocene, being associated with a lithic assemblage of local raw materials (flint and limestone) characterized by the absence of handaxes and reduction strategies primarily aimed at the production of small/medium-sized flakes. The faunal assemblage is dominated by ungulates often bearing cut marks. Combining chronology with the archaeological evidence, Isernia La Pineta exhibits a delay in the appearance of handaxes with respect to other European Palaeolithic sites of the Middle Pleistocene. Interestingly, this observation matches the persistence of archaic morphological features shown by the human calvarium from the Middle Pleistocene site of Ceprano, not far from Isernia (south-central Italy, Latium). In this perspective, our analysis is aimed to evaluate morphological features occurring in IS42.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Acheulian and Early Middle Paleolithic in Latium (Italy): Stability and Innovation

Paola Villa; Sylvain Soriano; Rainer Grün; Fabrizio Marra; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Giovanni Boschian; Luca Pollarolo; Fang Fang; Jean-Jacques Bahain

We present here the results of a technological and typological analysis of the Acheulian and early Middle Paleolithic assemblages from Torre in Pietra (Latium, Italy) together with comparisons with the Acheulian small tools of Castel di Guido. The assemblages were never chronometrically dated before. We have now 40Ar/39Ar dates and ESR-U-series dates, within a geomorphological framework, which support correlations to marine isotope stages. The Acheulian (previously correlated to MIS 9) is now dated to MIS 10 while the Middle Paleolithic is dated to MIS 7. Lithic analyses are preceded by taphonomic evaluations. The Levallois method of the Middle Paleolithic assemblage is an innovation characterized by the production of thin flake blanks without cortex. In contrast, the small tool blanks of the Acheulian were either pebbles or thick flakes with some cortex. They provided a relatively easy manual prehension. The choice of Levallois thin flake blanks in the Middle Paleolithic assemblage suggest that the new technology is most likely related to the emergence of hafting. Accordingly, the oldest direct evidence of hafting technology is from the site of Campitello Quarry in Tuscany (Central Italy) where birch-bark tar, found on the proximal part of two flint flakes, is dated to the end of MIS 7. Nevertheless, a peculiar feature of the Middle Paleolithic at Torre in Pietra is the continuous presence of small tool blanks on pebbles and cores and on thick flake albeit at a much lower frequency than in the older Acheulian industries. The adoption of the new technology is thus characterized by innovation combined with a degree of stability. The persistence of these habits in spite of the introduction of an innovative technique underlies the importance of cultural transmission and conformity in the behavior of Neandertals.


Nature | 2018

Earliest known hominin activity in the Philippines by 709 thousand years ago

Thomas Ingicco; Gerrit D van den Bergh; C. Jago-on; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Maria Gema Chacón; Noel Amano; Hubert Forestier; Carlos King; Kathryn Ann Manalo; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Marian Reyes; Anne-Marie Sémah; Qingfeng Shao; Pierre Voinchet; Christophe Falguères; P.C. Albers; Marie Lising; George Lyras; Dida Yurnaldi; Pierre Rochette; Angel Bautista; John de Vos

Over 60 years ago, stone tools and remains of megafauna were discovered on the Southeast Asian islands of Flores, Sulawesi and Luzon, and a Middle Pleistocene colonization by Homo erectus was initially proposed to have occurred on these islands1–4. However, until the discovery of Homo floresiensis in 2003, claims of the presence of archaic hominins on Wallacean islands were hypothetical owing to the absence of in situ fossils and/or stone artefacts that were excavated from well-documented stratigraphic contexts, or because secure numerical dating methods of these sites were lacking. As a consequence, these claims were generally treated with scepticism5. Here we describe the results of recent excavations at Kalinga in the Cagayan Valley of northern Luzon in the Philippines that have yielded 57 stone tools associated with an almost-complete disarticulated skeleton of Rhinoceros philippinensis, which shows clear signs of butchery, together with other fossil fauna remains attributed to stegodon, Philippine brown deer, freshwater turtle and monitor lizard. All finds originate from a clay-rich bone bed that was dated to between 777 and 631 thousand years ago using electron-spin resonance methods that were applied to tooth enamel and fluvial quartz. This evidence pushes back the proven period of colonization6 of the Philippines by hundreds of thousands of years, and furthermore suggests that early overseas dispersal in Island South East Asia by premodern hominins took place several times during the Early and Middle Pleistocene stages1–4. The Philippines therefore may have had a central role in southward movements into Wallacea, not only of Pleistocene megafauna7, but also of archaic hominins.Stone tools and a disarticulated and butchered skeleton of Rhinoceros philippinensis, found in a securely dated stratigraphic context, indicate the presence of an unknown hominin population in the Philippines as early as 709 thousand years ago.


Journal of Quaternary Science | 2015

The earliest securely dated hominin fossil in Italy and evidence of Acheulian occupation during glacial MIS 16 at Notarchirico (Venosa, Basilicata, Italy)

Alison Pereira; Sébastien Nomade; Pierre Voinchet; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Christophe Falguères; Henri Garon; David Lefevre; Jean Paul Raynal; Vincent Scao; Marcello Piperno


Quaternary International | 2016

The Middle Pleistocene site of Guado San Nicola (Monteroduni, Central Italy) on the Lower/Middle Palaeolithic transition

Carlo Peretto; Marta Arzarello; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Nicolas Boulbes; Jean Michel Dolo; Eric Douville; Christophe Falguères; Norbert Frank; Tristan Garcia; Giuseppe Lembo; Anne Marie Moigne; Brunella Muttillo; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Maria Angela Rufo; Benedetto Sala; Qingfeng Shao; Ursula Thun Hohenstein; Umberto Tessari; Maria Chiara Turrini; Carmela Vaccaro


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2017

First integrated tephrochronological record for the last ∼190 kyr from the Fucino Quaternary lacustrine succession, central Italy

Biagio Giaccio; Elizabeth Niespolo; Alison Pereira; Sébastien Nomade; Paul R. Renne; Paul G. Albert; Ilenia Arienzo; Eleonora Regattieri; Bernd Wagner; Giovanni Zanchetta; Mario Gaeta; Paolo Galli; Giorgio Mannella; Edoardo Peronace; Gianluca Sottili; Fabio Florindo; Niklas Leicher; Fabrizio Marra; Emma L. Tomlinson


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

A MIS 15-MIS 12 record of environmental changes and Lower Palaeolithic occupation from Valle Giumentina, central Italy

Valentina Villa; Alison Pereira; Christine Chaussé; Sébastien Nomade; Biagio Giaccio; Nicole Limondin-Lozouet; Fabio Fusco; Eleonora Regattieri; Jean-Philippe Degeai; Vincent Robert; Catherine Kuzucuoğlu; Giovanni Boschian; Silvano Agostini; Daniele Aureli; Marina Pagli; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Elisa Nicoud


Quaternary International | 2016

Preliminary data from Valle Giumentina Pleistocene site (Abruzzo, Central Italy): A new approach to a Clactonian and Acheulian sequence

Elisa Nicoud; Daniele Aureli; Marina Pagli; Valentina Villa; Christine Chaussé; Silvano Agostini; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Giovanni Boschian; Jean-Philippe Degeai; Fabio Fusco; Biagio Giaccio; Marion Hernandez; Catherine Kuzucuoğlu; Christelle Lahaye; Cristina Lemorini; Nicole Limondin-Lozouet; Paul Mazza; Norbert Mercier; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Vincent Robert; Maria Adelaide Rossi; Clément Virmoux; Andrea Zupancich


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2017

Middle Pleistocene molluscan fauna from the Valle Giumentina (Abruzzo, Central Italy): Palaeoenvironmental, biostratigraphical and biogeographical implications

Nicole Limondin-Lozouet; Valentina Villa; Alison Pereira; Sébastien Nomade; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Emmanuelle Stoetzel; Daniele Aureli; Elisa Nicoud


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Identification and characterization of two new obsidian sub-sources in the Nemrut volcano (Eastern Anatolia, Turkey): The Sıcaksu and Kayacık obsidian

A.K. Robin; Damase Mouralis; E. Akköprü; Bernard Gratuze; Catherine Kuzucuoğlu; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Ali Fuat Dogu; K. Erturaç; Lamya Khalidi

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Jean-Jacques Bahain

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christophe Falguères

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Voinchet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Tristan Garcia

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elisa Nicoud

École Normale Supérieure

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Valentina Villa

École Normale Supérieure

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