Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elisabetta Starnini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elisabetta Starnini.


Science | 2015

The makers of the Protoaurignacian and implications for Neandertal extinction

Stefano Benazzi; Viviane Slon; Sahra Talamo; F. Negrino; Marco Peresani; Shara E. Bailey; Susanna Sawyer; Daniele Panetta; G. Vicino; Elisabetta Starnini; Marcello A. Mannino; Piero A. Salvadori; Matthias Meyer; Svante Pääbo; Jean-Jacques Hublin

Cultural prehistory in southern Europe The Protoaurignacian culture appeared in the southern European archeological record around 42,000 years ago and was characterized by artefacts including personal ornaments and bladelets. Archaeologists have debated whether it was ancestral Homo sapiens or Neandertals who made these tools and ornaments. Benazzi et al. analyzed dental remains from two Protoaurignacian sites in Italy and confirm that they were H. sapiens. The arrival of this culture may have led to the demise of Neandertals in these areas (see the Perspective by Conard et al.). Science, this issue p. 793; see also p. 754 The Protoaurignacian culture in southern Europe involved anatomically modern humans and overlapped in time with the last Neandertals. [Also see Perspective by Conard] The Protoaurignacian culture is pivotal to the debate about the timing of the arrival of modern humans in western Europe and the demise of Neandertals. However, which group is responsible for this culture remains uncertain. We investigated dental remains associated with the Protoaurignacian. The lower deciduous incisor from Riparo Bombrini is modern human, based on its morphology. The upper deciduous incisor from Grotta di Fumane contains ancient mitochondrial DNA of a modern human type. These teeth are the oldest human remains in an Aurignacian-related archaeological context, confirming that by 41,000 calendar years before the present, modern humans bearing Protoaurignacian culture spread into southern Europe. Because the last Neandertals date to 41,030 to 39,260 calendar years before the present, we suggest that the Protoaurignacian triggered the demise of Neandertals in this area.


Archive | 2018

Neanderthals and Modern Humans in the Indus Valley? The Middle and Late (Upper) Palaeolithic Settlement of Sindh, a Forgotten Region of the Indian Subcontinent

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini

This paper discusses the Middle and Late (Upper) Palaeolithic sites of Sindh (Pakistan), a region of the Indian Subcontinent of fundamental importance for the study of the spread of both Neanderthals and Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in south Asia.


The Antiquaries Journal | 2016

THE MERCURIO GUNFLINTS: A TECHNO-TYPOLOGICAL AND CULTURAL ASSESSMENT

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini; Carlo Beltrame

The discovery of the wreck of the brig Mercurio, which sank in 1812 in the waters of the north Adriatic, is of major significance for the study of Italic Kingdom vessels from the Napoleonic era. The underwater excavations carried out in 2004–11 led to the recovery of many small finds, among which are several gunflints of different size and shape. The Mercurio gunflints were produced mainly from blades using a technique in use in Britain and France, but also in the workshops of the Lessini Hills around Ceredo (Verona province, northern Italy). We suggest that the flint employed for their manufacture probably came from Monte Baldo, in the Trentino, or perhaps from the River Tagliamento, in Friuli. We can exclude the possibility that the specimens recovered from the shipwreck were made from French flint because of the typically north Italian manufacturing technique and the character of the grey Treveti-derived flint. Given the complexity of the period during which the Grado (or Pirano) battle took place, the study of even such small items can contribute to a better interpretation of the dramatic events that characterised the beginning of the nineteenth century in that part of the Mediterranean.


Antiquity | 2010

The prehistoric flint mines at Jhimpir in Lower Sindh (Pakistan)

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini


POROčILO O RAZISKOVANJU PALEOLITA, NEOLITA IN ENEOLITA V SLOVENIJI | 1993

The Late Mesolithic and Early Neolithic Settlement of Northern Italy: Recent Considerations

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini; B. A. Voytek


Geoarchaeology and Archaeomineralogy | 2008

THE BRONZE AGE INDUS QUARRIES OF THE ROHRI HILLS AND ONGAR IN SINDH (PAKISTAN)

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini


VIII International Flint Symposium | 2006

Excavations at the Harappan Flint Quarry 862 on the Rohri Hills (sindh, Pakistan)

Elisabetta Starnini; Paolo Biagi


ATTI DELLA SOCIETA' PER LA PREISTORIA E PROTOSTORIA DELLA REGIONE FRIULI-VENEZIA GIULIA | 1998

Some Aspects of the Neolithization of the Adriatic Region

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini


Adalya | 2014

The Epipalaeolithic Site of Ouriakos on the Island of Lemnos and its Place in the Late Prleistocene Peopling of the East Mediterranean Region

Nikos Efstratiou; Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini


The Iron Gates in Prehistory | 2008

The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Trieste Karst (north-eastern Italy) as seen from the excavations at the Edera Cave

Paolo Biagi; Elisabetta Starnini; B. A. Voytek

Collaboration


Dive into the Elisabetta Starnini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paolo Biagi

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nikos Efstratiou

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlo Beltrame

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

View shared research outputs
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

Irene Dori

University of Florence

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge