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Dive into the research topics where Frank Braemer is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Braemer.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Squaring the circle. Social and environmental implications of pre-pottery neolithic building technology at Tell Qarassa (South Syria).

Andrea L. Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Amaia Arranz; Lydia Zapata; Carla Lancelotti; Marco Madella; Luis Teira; Miguel Jiménez; Frank Braemer; Juan José Ibáñez

We present the results of the microstratigraphic, phytolith and wood charcoal study of the remains of a 10.5 ka roof. The roof is part of a building excavated at Tell Qarassa (South Syria), assigned to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B period (PPNB). The Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) period in the Levant coincides with the emergence of farming. This fundamental change in subsistence strategy implied the shift from mobile to settled aggregated life, and from tents and huts to hard buildings. As settled life spread across the Levant, a generalised transition from round to square buildings occurred, that is a trademark of the PPNB period. The study of these buildings is fundamental for the understanding of the ever-stronger reciprocal socio-ecological relationship humans developed with the local environment since the introduction of sedentism and domestication. Descriptions of buildings in PPN archaeological contexts are usually restricted to the macroscopic observation of wooden elements (posts and beams) and mineral components (daub, plaster and stone elements). Reconstructions of microscopic and organic components are frequently based on ethnographic analogy. The direct study of macroscopic and microscopic, organic and mineral, building components performed at Tell Qarassa provides new insights on building conception, maintenance, use and destruction. These elements reflect new emerging paradigms in the relationship between Neolithic societies and the environment. A square building was possibly covered here with a radial roof, providing a glance into a topologic shift in the conception and understanding of volumes, from round-based to square-based geometries. Macroscopic and microscopic roof components indicate buildings were conceived for year-round residence rather than seasonal mobility. This implied performing maintenance and restoration of partially damaged buildings, as well as their adaptation to seasonal variability.


Antiquity | 2014

The human face and the origins of the Neolithic: the carved bone wand from Tell Qarassa North, Syria

Juan José Ibáñez; Jesús González-Urquijo; Frank Braemer

The origins of the Neolithic in the Near East were accompanied by significant ritual and symbolic innovations. New light is thrown on the social context of these changes by the discovery of a bone wand displaying two engraved human faces from the Early Neolithic site of Tell Qarassa in Syria, dating from the late ninth millennium BC. This small bone object from a funerary layer can be related to monumental statuary of the same period in the southern Levant and south-east Anatolia that probably depicted powerful supernatural beings. It may also betoken a new way of perceiving human identity and of facing the inevitability of death. By representing the deceased in visual form the living and the dead were brought closer together.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2007

Centennial to millennial-scale variability of the Indian monsoon during the early Holocene from a sediment, pollen and isotope record from the desert of Yemen

Anne-Marie Lézine; Jean Jacques Tiercelin; Christian P. Robert; Jean-François Saliège; Serge Cleuziou; Marie-Louise Inizan; Frank Braemer


Global and Planetary Change | 2010

Climate change and human occupation in the Southern Arabian lowlands during the last deglaciation and the Holocene

Anne-Marie Lézine; Christian P. Robert; Serge Cleuziou; Marie-Louise Inizan; Frank Braemer; Jean-François Saliège; Florence Sylvestre; Jean-Jacques Tiercelin; Rémy Crassard; Sophie Mery; Vincent Charpentier; Tara Steimer-Herbet


Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2015

Interpreting a ritual funerary area at the Early Neolithic site of Tell Qarassa North (South Syria, late 9th millennium BC)

Jonathan Santana; J. Velasco; Andrea L. Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Lydia Zapata; Luis Teira; C. Nicolle; Frank Braemer; Juan José Ibáñez


Actes du colloque de Rome : The seven plagues. Catastrophes and destructions in Palestine and Egypt during the pre-classical period. Volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, floods, wars, famines and epidemics in the archaeological record and in Biblical and ancient Egyptian sources: an innovative approach | 2012

Man/environment interactions in the Bronze Age Levant: Climatic crisis or fluctuations, chronology and settlement patterns in the Third Millennium Syrian arid steppe area villages

Frank Braemer; Bernard Geyer; Gourguen Davtian


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2017

Landscape transformations at the dawn of agriculture in southern Syria (10.7–9.9 ka cal. BP): plant-specific responses to the impact of human activities and climate change

Amaia Arranz-Otaegui; José Antonio López-Sáez; J. L. Araus; Marta Portillo; Andrea Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Lionel Gourichon; Frank Braemer; Lydia Zapata; Juan José Ibáñez


Archive | 2012

Nouvelles données sur les architectures des sites natoufiens de Jeftelik et Qarassa 3 (Syrie centro-occidentale et du sud).

Juan José Ibáñez; Ángel Armendáriz; Urquijo Jésus Gonzalez; Luis Teira; Frank Braemer; Lionel Gourichon; A. Rodriguez Rodriguez


Archive | 2007

IX. Jarf al-Ibil et Jarf al-Nabīrah, deux sites rupestres de la région d’al-Ḍāli‘

Frank Braemer; Pierre Bodu; Rémy Crassard; Muhamad Manqūsh


Archive | 2013

Squaring the Circle. Social and Environmental Implications of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Building Technology at Tell

Andrea Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Amaia Arranz; Lydia Zapata; Carla Lancelotti; Marco Madella; Luis Teira; Miguel Jiménez; Frank Braemer; Juan José Ibáñez

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Juan José Ibáñez

Spanish National Research Council

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Luis Teira

University of Cantabria

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Lydia Zapata

University of the Basque Country

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Gourguen Davtian

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Amaia Arranz

University of the Basque Country

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Lionel Gourichon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Andrea L. Balbo

Spanish National Research Council

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