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Dive into the research topics where Pierre Voinchet is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre Voinchet.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Radiometric dating of the type-site for Homo heidelbergensis at Mauer, Germany

Günther A. Wagner; Matthias Krbetschek; Detlev Degering; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Qingfeng Shao; Christophe Falguères; Pierre Voinchet; Jean-Michel Dolo; Tristan Garcia; G. Philip Rightmire

The Mauer mandible, holotype of Homo heidelbergensis, was found in 1907 in fluvial sands deposited by the Neckar River 10 km southeast of Heidelberg, Germany. The fossil is an important key to understanding early human occupation of Europe north of the Alps. Given the associated mammal fauna and the geological context, the find layer has been placed in the early Middle Pleistocene, but confirmatory chronometric evidence has hitherto been missing. Here we show that two independent techniques, the combined electron spin resonance/U-series method used with mammal teeth and infrared radiofluorescence applied to sand grains, date the type-site of Homo heidelbergensis at Mauer to 609 ± 40 ka. This result demonstrates that the mandible is the oldest hominin fossil reported to date from central and northern Europe and raises questions concerning the phyletic relationship of Homo heidelbergensis to more ancient populations documented from southern Europe and in Africa. We address the paleoanthropological significance of the Mauer jaw in light of this dating evidence.


Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 2000

Bleaching of ESR signals by the sunlight: a laboratory experiment for establishing the ESR dating of sediments

Shin Toyoda; Pierre Voinchet; Christophe Falguères; Jean Michel Dolo; Michel Laurent

A laboratory bleaching experiment was performed in order to improve the method of ESR dating of sediments. Several sedimentary, volcanic, and granitic quartz samples showed consistent bleaching response for the exposure to halogen lamps. It was found that the most sensitive signals are the Ti-H and Ti-Na centers. There was no difference observed within the samples exposed to light filtered by several color glass plates, according to the present preliminary result.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2003

Artificial optical bleaching of the Aluminium center in quartz implications to ESR dating of sediments.

Pierre Voinchet; Christophe Falguères; M. Laurent; Shin Toyoda; Jean-Jacques Bahain; J.M. Dolo

Abstract Electron spin resonance (ESR) dating of quartz extracted from sediments may contribute to elaborate a Neogene and Quaternary chronostratigraphy, especially in the case of azoic deposits, when methods such as thermoluminescence or K/Ar cannot be applied. The ESR method is applicable for aeolian, littoral and fluvial sediments when quartz is zeroed or bleached by an optical phenomenon (photoelectric effect due mainly to UV solar rays in this case). ESR dating on bleached quartz is based on the presence of paramagnetic substituted atoms in the crystal lattice. The Al-center can be optically bleached, and its signal intensity decreases in fossil samples versus exposure to the solar light. After a long time, the ESR intensity reaches a plateau value corresponding to the electrons which cannot be “extracted” by the light energy. These electrons represent a “residual” dose which must be subtracted from the total equivalent dose in order to obtain the archaeological dose. Our kinetic study has the objectives of obtaining a new modelization and to establish a correct time of natural bleaching for using quartz sample as appropriate for dating. We have investigated samples from a fossil fluvial sand from the Creuse river terraces system (France). Our experimental bleaching curve obtained is compared with that one previously proposed by Walther and Zilles (Quat. Sci. Rev. 13 (1994) 611).


Geochronometria | 2008

ESR Dating of Sedimentary Quartz from Two Pleistocene Deposits Using Al and Ti-Centers

Hélène Tissoux; Shin Toyoda; Christophe Falguères; Pierre Voinchet; Masashi Takada; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Jackie Despriée

ESR Dating of Sedimentary Quartz from Two Pleistocene Deposits Using Al and Ti-Centers One sample from a fluvial terrace of Loir river (France) deposited during isotopic stages 7-8 and two samples from isotopic stage 5 marine sediments of Echizen Coast (Japan) were dated by ESR of quartz grains. Both additive and regenerative techniques were used on Ti-Li and Ti-H centers of quartz. No change of sensitivity of the centers was observed during regeneration which significantly reduced the errors on the equivalent doses. Bleaching experiments indicated that the Ti-Li center is less sensitive to UV(ultra-violet)-A (365-412 nm) than to the full sun spectrum whereas UVA alone is sufficient to reset the bleachable component of the Al-center. This effect could be the origin of the strong overestimation of the ages determined using the Ti-Li center in this study. The comparison of the equivalent doses determined by the two Ti-centers indicated that bleaching before deposition of the fluvial sediment was apparently better than for the marine sample.


Geochronometria | 2013

ESR dose response of Al center measured in quartz samples from the Yellow River (China): Implications for the dating of Upper Pleistocene sediment

Pierre Voinchet; Gongming Yin; Christophe Falguères; Chun-Ru Liu; Fei Han; Xuefeng Sun; Jean-Jacques Bahain

The ESR dating method requires to describe the evolution of the ESR signal intensities vs. increasing gamma doses, then to extrapolate the equivalent dose of radiation received by the sample since its deposition using mathematical fitting. The function classically used to describe the growth curves of ESR aluminium signal in quartz was recently discussed and challenged for Lower Pleistocene sediments. In the present work, some alluvial sediments sampled in Upper Pleistocene fluvial terraces of the Yellow River system (China) permit us to test the application of another extrapolation function (linear + exponential) recently proposed for Lower Pleistocene sediments. The equivalent doses obtained here for the recent deposits of the Yellow River system and the corresponding ages are promising and indicate the potential of ESR to date quartz deposits from Upper Pleistocene times.


Geochronometria | 2013

ESR dating of the Donggutuo Palaeolithic site in the Nihewan Basin, northern China

Chun-Ru Liu; Gongming Yin; Fang Fang; Pierre Voinchet; Cheng-Long Deng; Fei Han; Jian-Ping Li; Wei-Juan Song; Duo Wang; Jean-Jacques Bahain

The fluvio-lacustrine sequences in the Nihewan Basin, northern China, provide important terrestrial archives about Palaeolithic settlements and, therefore, about early human occupation in high northern latitude in East Asia. Here we present detailed ESR dating of the Donggutuo Palaeolithic site, located in this basin. Four levels A, B, C and E of the Donggutuo archaeological layer yield ESR ages ranging from 1060±129 ka to 1171±132 ka with a mean of 1119±132 ka. The ages are consistent with the paleomagnetic data, which show that the Donggutuo Palaeolithic site lies just below the onset of the Jaramillo normal subchron (0.99–1.07 Ma). Furthermore, our results indicate that the reliable ESR dating range of bleached quartz using Ti-Li centre can be effectively extended to 1100 ka and the Ti-Li centre was zeroed before the last deposition, which requires improvement of the understanding of the bleaching mechanism conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2017

High handaxe symmetry at the beginning of the European Acheulian: The data from la Noira (France) in context

Radu Iovita; Inbal Tuvi-Arad; Marie-Hélène Moncel; Jackie Despriée; Pierre Voinchet; Jean-Jacques Bahain

In the last few decades, new discoveries have pushed the beginning of the biface-rich European Acheulian from 500 thousand years (ka) ago back to at least 700 ka, and possibly to 1 million years (Ma) ago. It remains, however, unclear to date if handaxes arrived in Europe as a fully developed technology or if they evolved locally from core-and-flake industries. This issue is also linked with another long-standing debate on the existence and behavioral, cognitive, and social meaning of a possibly chronological trend for increased handaxe symmetry throughout the Lower Paleolithic. The newly discovered sites can provide a link between the much older Acheulian in Africa and the Levant and the well-known assemblages from the later European Acheulian, enabling a rigorous testing of these hypotheses using modern morphometric methods. Here we use the Continuous Symmetry Measure (CSM) method to quantify handaxe symmetry at la Noira, a newly excavated site in central France, which features two archaeological levels, respectively ca. 700 ka and 500 ka old. In order to provide a context for the new data, we use a large aggregate from the well-known 500 ka old site of Boxgrove, England. We show that handaxes from the oldest layer at la Noira, although on average less symmetric than both those from the younger layers at the same site and than those from Boxgrove, are nevertheless much more symmetric than other early Acheulian specimens evaluated using the CSM method. We also correlate trends in symmetry to degree of reduction, demonstrating that raw material availability and discard patterns may affect observed symmetry values. We conclude that it is likely that, by the time the Acheulian arrived in Europe, its makers were, from a cognitive and motor-control point of view, already capable of producing the symmetric variant of this technology.


Geochronometria | 2013

ESR geochronology of the Minjiang River terraces at Wenchuan, eastern margin of Tibetan Plateau, China

Chun-Ru Liu; Gongming Yin; Huiping Zhang; Wen-Jun Zheng; Pierre Voinchet; Fei Han; Duo Wang; Wei-Juan Song; Jean-Jacques Bahain

The Minjiang River terrace along the Longmen Shan fault zone near Wenchuan, at the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, China, provides archives for tectonic activity and quaternary climate change. However, previous studies were not able to provide ages older than 100 ka due to the limitations of dating material or/and methods applied to date the fluvial sediments. In this study, we used the ESR signal of the Ti-Li center in quartz to obtain the ages of four higher terraces (T3–T6). According to the results, the terraces T3 to T6 were formed at 64±19 ka, 101±15 ka, 153±33 ka, and 423±115 ka, respectively. Combined with previous studies, these results indicate that the formations of all terraces correspond to glacial/interglacial transition periods, such as, T1-T5 being correlated to MIS2/1, MIS4/3, MIS5d/5c, and MIS6/5e respectively, while T6 probably to MIS12/11. According to these data, it is found that the average incision rate was significantly higher over the last 150 ka than that previous 100 ka (250 to 150 ka). As both tectonics and climate have affected the formation of these terraces, in addition to the overall uplifting of Tibetan Plateau, the regional uplift due to isostasy would be an additional tectonic factor in the formation of river terraces in the eastern margin of Tibetan plateau.


Nature | 2018

Earliest known hominin activity in the Philippines by 709 thousand years ago

Thomas Ingicco; Gerrit D van den Bergh; C. Jago-on; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Maria Gema Chacón; Noel Amano; Hubert Forestier; Carlos King; Kathryn Ann Manalo; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Marian Reyes; Anne-Marie Sémah; Qingfeng Shao; Pierre Voinchet; Christophe Falguères; P.C. Albers; Marie Lising; George Lyras; Dida Yurnaldi; Pierre Rochette; Angel Bautista; John de Vos

Over 60 years ago, stone tools and remains of megafauna were discovered on the Southeast Asian islands of Flores, Sulawesi and Luzon, and a Middle Pleistocene colonization by Homo erectus was initially proposed to have occurred on these islands1–4. However, until the discovery of Homo floresiensis in 2003, claims of the presence of archaic hominins on Wallacean islands were hypothetical owing to the absence of in situ fossils and/or stone artefacts that were excavated from well-documented stratigraphic contexts, or because secure numerical dating methods of these sites were lacking. As a consequence, these claims were generally treated with scepticism5. Here we describe the results of recent excavations at Kalinga in the Cagayan Valley of northern Luzon in the Philippines that have yielded 57 stone tools associated with an almost-complete disarticulated skeleton of Rhinoceros philippinensis, which shows clear signs of butchery, together with other fossil fauna remains attributed to stegodon, Philippine brown deer, freshwater turtle and monitor lizard. All finds originate from a clay-rich bone bed that was dated to between 777 and 631 thousand years ago using electron-spin resonance methods that were applied to tooth enamel and fluvial quartz. This evidence pushes back the proven period of colonization6 of the Philippines by hundreds of thousands of years, and furthermore suggests that early overseas dispersal in Island South East Asia by premodern hominins took place several times during the Early and Middle Pleistocene stages1–4. The Philippines therefore may have had a central role in southward movements into Wallacea, not only of Pleistocene megafauna7, but also of archaic hominins.Stone tools and a disarticulated and butchered skeleton of Rhinoceros philippinensis, found in a securely dated stratigraphic context, indicate the presence of an unknown hominin population in the Philippines as early as 709 thousand years ago.


Quaternary International | 2005

New 40Ar/39Ar, stratigraphic and palaeoclimatic data on the Isernia La Pineta Lower Palaeolithic site, Molise, Italy

Mauro Coltorti; G. Féraud; A. Marzoli; Carlo Peretto; T. Ton-That; Pierre Voinchet; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Antonella Minelli; U. Thun Hohenstein

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Jean-Jacques Bahain

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christophe Falguères

National Museum of Natural History

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Jackie Despriée

National Museum of Natural History

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Hélène Tissoux

National Museum of Natural History

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Marie-Hélène Moncel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gilles Courcimault

National Museum of Natural History

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Erwan Messager

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nicole Limondin-Lozouet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Davinia Moreno

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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