Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carlo Tozzi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carlo Tozzi.


Archive | 2011

Intra-site Obsidian Subsource Patterns at Contraguda, Sardinia (Italy)

Robert H. Tykot; Luca Lai; Carlo Tozzi

Obsidian sourcing studies have been done in the Mediterranean for more than 40 years, while in the last decade the importance of attributing artifacts to specific subsources has been demonstrated, as it reveals geographic and chronological patterns of obsidian usage. In particular, changes in the usage of the Monte Arci (Sardinia) subsources have raised questions about quality, quantity, access, and socioeconomic factors involved in the acquisition, production, trade, and use of obsidian during the Early, Middle, and Late Neolithic periods (ca. 6000–3000 BC).


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2017

The dawn of dentistry in the late upper Paleolithic: An early case of pathological intervention at Riparo Fredian

Gregorio Oxilia; Flavia Fiorillo; Francesco Boschin; Elisabetta Boaretto; Salvatore Andrea Apicella; Chiara Matteucci; Daniele Panetta; Rossella Pistocchi; Franca Guerrini; Cristiana Margherita; Massimo Andretta; Rita Sorrentino; Giovanni Boschian; Simona Arrighi; Irene Dori; Giuseppe Mancuso; Jacopo Crezzini; Alessandro Riga; Maria C. Serrangeli; Antonino Vazzana; Piero Salvadori; Mariangela Vandini; Carlo Tozzi; Adriana Moroni; Robin N. M. Feeney; John C. Willman; Jacopo Moggi-Cecchi; Stefano Benazzi

OBJECTIVES Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-producing societies associated with high levels of oral pathology. However, some Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers show extensive oral pathology, suggesting that experimentation with therapeutic dental interventions may have greater antiquity. Here, we report the second earliest probable evidence for dentistry in a Late Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherer recovered from Riparo Fredian (Tuscany, Italy). MATERIALS AND METHODS The Fredian 5 human consists of an associated maxillary anterior dentition with antemortem exposure of both upper first incisor (I1 ) pulp chambers. The pulp chambers present probable antemortem modifications that warrant in-depth analyses and direct dating. Scanning electron microscopy, microCT and residue analyses were used to investigate the purported modifications of external and internal surfaces of each I1 . RESULTS The direct date places Fredian 5 between 13,000 and 12,740 calendar years ago. Both pulp chambers were circumferentially enlarged prior to the death of this individual. Occlusal dentine flaking on the margin of the cavities and striations on their internal aspects suggest anthropic manipulation. Residue analyses revealed a conglomerate of bitumen, vegetal fibers, and probable hairs adherent to the internal walls of the cavities. DISCUSSION The results are consistent with tool-assisted manipulation to remove necrotic or infected pulp in vivo and the subsequent use of a composite, organic filling. Fredian 5 confirms the practice of dentistry-specifically, a pathology-induced intervention-among Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers. As such, it appears that fundamental perceptions of biomedical knowledge and practice were in place long before the socioeconomic changes associated with the transition to food production in the Neolithic.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The Middle Pleistocene (MIS 12) human dental remains from Fontana Ranuccio (Latium) and Visogliano (Friuli-Venezia Giulia), Italy. A comparative high resolution endostructural assessment

Clément Zanolli; María Martinón-Torres; Federico Bernardini; Giovanni Boschian; Alfredo Coppa; Diego Dreossi; Lucia Mancini; Marina Martínez de Pinillos; Laura Martín-Francés; José María Bermúdez de Castro; Carlo Tozzi; Claudio Tuniz; Roberto Macchiarelli

The penecontemporaneous Middle Pleistocene sites of Fontana Ranuccio (Latium) and Visogliano (Friuli-Venezia Giulia), set c. 450 km apart in central and northeastern Italy, respectively, have yielded some among the oldest human fossil remains testifying to a peopling phase of the Italian Peninsula broadly during the glacial MIS 12, a stage associated with one among the harshest climatic conditions in the Northern hemisphere during the entire Quaternary period. Together with the large samples from Atapuerca Sima de los Huesos, Spain, and Caune de l’Arago at Tautavel, France, the remains from Fontana Ranuccio and Visogliano are among the few mid-Middle Pleistocene dental assemblages from Western Europe available for investigating the presence of an early Neanderthal signature in their inner structure. We applied two- three-dimensional techniques of virtual imaging and geometric morphometrics to the high-resolution X-ray microtomography record of the dental remains from these two Italian sites and compared the results to the evidence from a selected number of Pleistocene and extant human specimens/samples from Europe and North Africa. Depending on their preservation quality and on the degree of occlusal wear, we comparatively assessed: (i) the crown enamel and radicular dentine thickness topographic variation of a uniquely represented lower incisor; (ii) the lateral crown tissue proportions of premolars and molars; (iii) the enamel-dentine junction, and (iv) the pulp cavity morphology of all available specimens. Our analyses reveal in both samples a Neanderthal-like inner structural signal, for some aspects also resembling the condition shown by the contemporary assemblage from Atapuerca SH, and clearly distinct from the recent human figures. This study provides additional evidence indicating that an overall Neanderthal morphological dental template was preconfigured in Western Europe at least 430 to 450 ka ago.


PLOS ONE | 2018

From Neandertals to modern humans: New data on the Uluzzian

Paola Villa; Luca Pollarolo; Jacopo Conforti; Fabrizio Marra; Cristian Biagioni; Ilaria Degano; Jeannette J. Lucejko; Carlo Tozzi; Massimo Pennacchioni; Giovanni Zanchetta; Cristiano Nicosia; M. Martini; Emanuela Sibilia; Laura Panzeri

Having thrived in Eurasia for 350,000 years Neandertals disappeared from the record around 40,000–37,000 years ago, after modern humans entered Europe. It was a complex process of population interactions that included cultural exchanges and admixture between Neandertals and dispersing groups of modern humans. In Europe Neandertals are always associated with the Mousterian while the Aurignacian is associated with modern humans only. The onset of the Aurignacian is preceded by “transitional” industries which show some similarities with the Mousterian but also contain modern tool forms. Information on these industries is often incomplete or disputed and this is true of the Uluzzian. We present the results of taphonomic, typological and technological analyses of two Uluzzian sites, Grotta La Fabbrica (Tuscany) and the newly discovered site of Colle Rotondo (Latium). Comparisons with Castelcivita and Grotta del Cavallo show that the Uluzzian is a coherent cultural unit lasting about five millennia, replaced by the Protoaurignacian before the eruption of the Campanian Ignimbrite. The lack of skeletal remains at our two sites and the controversy surrounding the stratigraphic position of modern human teeth at Cavallo makes it difficult to reach agreement about authorship of the Uluzzian, for which alternative hypotheses have been proposed. Pending the discovery of DNA or further human remains, these hypotheses can only be evaluated by archaeological arguments, i.e. evidence of continuities and discontinuities between the Uluzzian and the preceding and succeeding culture units in Italy. However, in the context of “transitional” industries with disputed dates for the arrival of modern humans in Europe, and considering the case of the Châtelperronian, an Upper Paleolithic industry made by Neandertals, typo-technology used as an indicator of hominin authorship has limited predictive value. We corroborate previous suggestions that the Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition occurred as steps of rapid changes and geographically uneven rates of spread.


Antiquity | 2017

Spiralled patchwork in pottery manufacture and the introduction of farming to Southern Europe

Louise Gomart; Allon Weiner; Marzia Gabriele; Gilles Durrenmath; Sabine Sorin; Lucia Angeli; Marta Colombo; Cristina Fabbri; Roberto Maggi; Chiara Panelli; Didier F. Pisani; Giovanna Radi; Carlo Tozzi; Didier Binder

Abstract Pottery-manufacturing sequences can act as proxies for human migration and interaction. A good example is provided by the ‘spiralled patchwork technology’ (SPT) identified at two key early farming sites in the Ligurian-Provencal Arc in the north-west of the Italian peninsula. SPT is distinct from the ceramic technology used by early farmer communities in south-east Italy that shows technical continuity with the southern Balkans. Macroscopic analysis and micro-computed tomography suggests the presence of two communities of practice, and thus two distinct social groups in the northern Mediterranean: one of southern Balkan tradition, the other (associated with SPT) of as yet unknown origin. The identification of SPT opens up the exciting possibility of tracing the origins and migrations of a second distinct group of early farmers into Southern Europe.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2000

New Human Remains of Archaic Homo sapiens and Lower Palaeolithic Industries from Visogliano (Duino Aurisina, Trieste, Italy)

Laura Abbazzi; F. Fanfani; Marco Ferretti; Lorenzo Rook; L. Cattani; Federico Masini; Francesco Mallegni; F. Negrino; Carlo Tozzi


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2012

Examining Dietary Variability of the Earliest Farmers of South-Eastern Italy

Roberta Lelli; Richard Allen; Gianfranco Biondi; Mauro Calattini; Cecilia Conati Barbaro; Maria Antonia Gorgoglione; Alessandra Manfredini; Cristina Martínez-Labarga; Francesca Radina; Mara Silvestrini; Carlo Tozzi; Olga Rickards; Oliver E. Craig


Quaternary Geochronology | 2008

ESR/U-series chronology of the Lower Palaeolithic palaeoanthropological site of Visogliano, Trieste, Italy

Christophe Falguères; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Carlo Tozzi; Giovanni Boschian; Jean-Michel Dolo; Norbert Mercier; Hélène Valladas; Yuji Yokoyama


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

Changes in mobility patterns as a factor for site density variation in the recent Epigravettian of northern Italy and Southeastern France

Nicolas Naudinot; Antonin Tomasso; Carlo Tozzi; Marco Peresani


Collegium Antropologicum | 2004

Inorganic Raw Materials Economy and Provenance of Chipped Industry in Some Stone Age Sites of Northern and Central Italy

Amilcare Bietti; Giovanni Boschian; Gino Mirocle Crisci; Ermanno Danese; Anna Maria De Francesco; Mario Dini; Federica Fontana; Alessandra Giampietri; Renata Grifoni; Antonio Guerreschi; Jérémie Liagre; Fabio Negrino; Giovanna Radi; Carlo Tozzi; Robert H. Tykot

Collaboration


Dive into the Carlo Tozzi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge