Gilbert B Tostevin
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by Gilbert B Tostevin.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2008
Daniel Richter; Gilbert B Tostevin; Petr Škrdla
Results of thermoluminescence (TL) dating of 11 heated flint artifacts from the 2002 excavation at Brno-Bohunice, Czech Republic, are presented. The samples are from the eponym locality for the Bohunician, an industrial type considered technologically transitional between Middle and Upper Paleolithic core reduction strategies. The Bohunician is the first early Upper Paleolithic technocomplex in the Middle Danube of Central Europe and, therefore, is implicated in several issues related to the origins of modern humans in Europe. The Bohunician provides an example of how one technological strategy combines crested blade initiation of a core with the surficial (almost Levalloisian) reduction of blanks as blades and points. As the Middle Danube lacks antecedents of the behavioral steps within this technology, several hypotheses of inter-regional cultural transmission, with and without hominin gene flow, could explain the appearance of the Bohunician. The elucidation of the temporal context of Bohunician assemblages is, therefore, a critical step in understanding the behavioral, and potentially biological, succession in this region. Radiocarbon age estimates from charcoal associated with Bohunician sites suggest a wide age range between 33 and 41 ka 14C BP, which is also observed for individual sites. TL dating of heated flint artifacts provides ages on the calendric time scale of an archeological event, the firing. The weighted mean of 48.2+/-1.9 ka BPTL for 11 heated flint samples from Brno-Bohunice provides the first non-radiocarbon data on archeological material from the Bohunician. The TL dating, in conjunction with the archeological and sedimentological analysis, allows the evaluation of the integrity of this new type-collection. The hypothetical possibility of the incorporation of Szeletian artifacts (i.e., leaf points) into the site formation processes can therefore be refuted.
Lithic technology | 2015
Michael Shott; Gilbert B Tostevin
Two archaeologists, one who works in the New World and one who works in the Old World, provide comments on bipolar technology as explored through the articles submitted to this special issue of Lithic Technology edited by Justin Pargeter and Hilary Duke.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Lukas S. Premo; Gilbert B Tostevin
Culturally transmitted behavior can be structured in its performance both geographically and temporally, in terms of where and when implements are made and used on the landscape (what Ingold calls “the taskscape”). Yet cultural transmission theory has not yet explored the consequences of behaviors transmitted differently due to their enactment at different taskscape locations, what Tostevin calls “taskscape visibility.” Here, we use computer simulations to explore how taskscape visibility and forager mobility affect the diversity of two selectively neutral culturally transmitted traits within a single population of social learners. The trait that can be transmitted from residential bases only (lower taskscape visibility) shows greater diversity than the trait that can be transmitted from residential bases and logistical camps (higher taskscape visibility). In addition, increased logistical mobility has a positive effect on the diversity of the trait with the lower taskscape visibility while it generally shows little to no effect on the diversity of the trait with higher taskscape visibility. Without an appreciation for the ways in which taskscape visibility and mobility can structure cultural transmission in space and through time, the difference in the observed equilibrium diversity levels of the two traits might be incorrectly interpreted as resulting from qualitatively different forms of biased cultural transmission. The results of our simulation experiment suggest that researchers may need to take the taskscape visibility into account when inferring cultural transmission from archaeological data.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2009
Daniel Richter; Gilbert B Tostevin; Petr Škrdla; William Davies
Archive | 2012
Gilbert B Tostevin
Anthropologie | 2006
Gilbert B Tostevin; Petr Škrdla
Archaeometry | 2011
Ladislav Nejman; Edward J. Rhodes; Petr Škrdla; Gilbert B Tostevin; Petr Neruda; Zdenka Nerudova; Karel Valoch; Martin Oliva; Lubomira Kaminska; J. Svoboda; Rainer Grün
Paleoanthropology | 2011
Gilbert B Tostevin
Prehled výzkumu | 2003
Petr Škrdla; Gilbert B Tostevin
Archive | 2011
Gilbert B Tostevin