Laurence Bourguignon
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Laurence Bourguignon.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2013
Alain Turq; Wil Roebroeks; Laurence Bourguignon; Jean-Philippe Faivre
The importance of the transport of stone artefacts in structuring Neandertal lithic assemblages has often been addressed, but the degree to which this led to fragmentation of lithic reduction over Middle Palaeolithic landscapes has not been explicitly studied thus far. Large-scale excavations of Middle Palaeolithic open-air sites and refitting studies of the retrieved assemblages have yielded new, high-resolution data on the mobile aspects of Neandertal stone tool technology. In this paper, we integrate lithic technology and raw material data from recent studies of Middle Palaeolithic open-air and rock shelter sites in Western Europe. We demonstrate that the results of a variety of typological, technological (especially refitting), and lithological studies have important consequences for our knowledge of the acquisition of raw materials and subsequent production, usage and discard of stone artefacts in the Middle Palaeolithic. Neandertal production and use of stone tools was fragmented in three domains: the spatial, the temporal and the social domain. We show that this versatile segmentation of stone artefact handling strategies is a main determinant of the character of the Neandertal archaeological record. Our data testify to ubiquitous and continuous transport of stone artefacts of a wide variety of forms, picked by Neandertals using selection criteria that were sometimes far removed from what archaeologists have traditionally considered, and to some degree still consider, to be desired end products of knapping activities. The data presented here testify to the variability and versatility of Middle Palaeolithic stone tool technology, whose fragmented character created very heterogeneous archaeological assemblages, usually the product of a wide variety of independent import, use, discard and/or subsequent transport events.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
William Rendu; Cédric Beauval; Isabelle Crevecoeur; Priscilla Bayle; Antoine Balzeau; Thierry Bismuth; Laurence Bourguignon; Géraldine Delfour; Jean-Philippe Faivre; François Lacrampe-Cuyaubère; Carlotta Tavormina; Dominique Todisco; Alain Turq; Bruno Maureille
Significance For several decades, scholars have questioned the existence of burial in Western Europe prior to the arrival of Anatomically Modern Humans. Therefore, an approach combining a global field recovery and the reexamination of the previously discovered Neandertal remains has been undertaken in the site of La Chapelle-aux-Saints (France), where the hypothesis of a Neandertal burial was raised for the first time. This project has concluded that the Neandertal of La Chapelle-aux-Saints was deposit in a pit dug by other members of its group and protected by a rapid covering from any disturbance. These discoveries attest the existence of West European Neandertal burial and of the Neandertal cognitive capacity to produce it. The bouffia Bonneval at La Chapelle-aux-Saints is well known for the discovery of the first secure Neandertal burial in the early 20th century. However, the intentionality of the burial remains an issue of some debate. Here, we present the results of a 12-y fieldwork project, along with a taphonomic analysis of the human remains, designed to assess the funerary context of the La Chapelle-aux-Saints Neandertal. We have established the anthropogenic nature of the burial pit and underlined the taphonomic evidence of a rapid burial of the body. These multiple lines of evidence support the hypothesis of an intentional burial. Finally, the discovery of skeletal elements belonging to the original La Chapelle aux Saints 1 individual, two additional young individuals, and a second adult in the bouffia Bonneval highlights a more complex site-formation history than previously proposed.
Mémoires de la Société Préhistorique Française | 2007
Pierre Guibert; F. Bechtel; Laurence Bourguignon; Michel Brenet; Isabelle Couchoud; Anne Delagnes; F. Delpech; Luc Detrain; Mathieu Duttine; Milagros Folgado; Jacques Jaubert; Christelle Lahaye; Michel Lenoir; Bruno Maureille; Pierre-Jean Texier; Alain Turq; Emmanuelle Vieillevigne; Gérard Villeneuve
Archive | 2008
Liliane Meignen; Anne Delagnes; Laurence Bourguignon
Archive | 2009
Peter Hiscock; Alain Turq; Jean-Philippe Faivre; Laurence Bourguignon
Systèmes de production lithique, gestion des outillages et territoires au Paléolithique moyen : où se trouve la complexité ? | 2005
Laurence Bourguignon; Anne Delagnes; Liliane Meignen
Quaternary International | 2016
Laurence Bourguignon; Jean-Yves Crochet; Ramon Capdevila; Jérôme Ivorra; Pierre-Olivier Antoine; Jordi Agustí; Deborah Barsky; Hugues-Alexandre Blain; Nicolas Boulbes; Laurent Bruxelles; Julien Claude; David Cochard; Arnaud Filoux; Cyril Firmat; Iván Lozano-Fernández; Pierre Magniez; Maxime Pelletier; Joseba Rios-Garaizar; Agnès Testu; Patricia Valensi; Louis De Weyer
Paleobiology | 2002
Laurence Bourguignon; F. Sellami; V. Deloze; N. Sellier-segard; Sylvie Beyries; A. Emery-barbier
Quaternary International | 2016
Cristina Lemorini; Laurence Bourguignon; Andrea Zupancich; Avi Gopher; Ran Barkai
Neandertales cantábricos, estado de la cuestión: actas de la reunión científica: celebrada en el Museo de Altamira los días 20-22 de octubre de 2004, 2005, ISBN 84-8181-270-6, págs. 527-539 | 2005
Jesús Emilio González Urquijo; Juan José Ibáñez Estévez; Joseba Rios Garaizar; Laurence Bourguignon; Pedro María Castaños Ugarte; Andoni Tarriño Vinagre