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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Biton is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Biton.


Science | 2009

Spatial Organization of Hominin Activities at Gesher Benot Ya’aqov, Israel

Nira Alperson-Afil; Gonen Sharon; Mordechai E. Kislev; Yoel Melamed; Irit Zohar; Shosh Ashkenazi; Rivka Rabinovich; Rebecca Biton; Ella Werker; Gideon Hartman; Craig S. Feibel; Naama Goren-Inbar

Home Is Where the Hearth Is One aspect of human intelligence is the ability to organize our living and working spaces. It was generally thought that this capability arose with modern humans in the past 100,000 years or so. However, Alperson-Afil et al. (p. 1677) found evidence of domestic organization 800,000 years ago at a Pleistocene hominin campsite in the Jordan Valley. Around patches of burnt debris, the remains of a wide range of plant and animal foodstuffs were found, including fruits and seeds, as well as remnants of turtles, elephants, and small rodents. Specific types of stone tools appear to have been made around the hearths, where there was also evidence of nut roasting and consumption of crabs and fish. In a more distant area there were signs of intensive flint knapping and food chopping. The spatial distribution of artifacts implies that living space was organized by use as early as 800,000 years ago. The spatial designation of discrete areas for different activities reflects formalized conceptualization of a living space. The results of spatial analyses of a Middle Pleistocene Acheulian archaeological horizon (about 750,000 years ago) at Gesher Benot Ya’aqov, Israel, indicate that hominins differentiated their activities (stone knapping, tool use, floral and faunal processing and consumption) across space. These were organized in two main areas, including multiple activities around a hearth. The diversity of human activities and the distinctive patterning with which they are organized implies advanced organizational skills of the Gesher Benot Ya’aqov hominins.


Nature Communications | 2013

The rediscovered Hula painted frog is a living fossil

Rebecca Biton; Eli Geffen; Miguel Vences; Orly Cohen; Salvador Bailon; Rivka Rabinovich; Yoram Malka; Talya Oron; Renaud Boistel; Vlad Brumfeld; Sarig Gafny

Amphibian declines are seen as an indicator of the onset of a sixth mass extinction of life on earth. Because of a combination of factors such as habitat destruction, emerging pathogens and pollutants, over 156 amphibian species have not been seen for several decades, and 34 of these were listed as extinct by 2004. Here we report the rediscovery of the Hula painted frog, the first amphibian to have been declared extinct. We provide evidence that not only has this species survived undetected in its type locality for almost 60 years but also that it is a surviving member of an otherwise extinct genus of alytid frogs, Latonia, known only as fossils from Oligocene to Pleistocene in Europe. The survival of this living fossil is a striking example of resilience to severe habitat degradation during the past century by an amphibian.


Journal of Morphology | 2016

Osteological Observations on the Alytid Anura Latonia nigriventer with Comments on Functional Morphology, Biogeography, and Evolutionary History

Rebecca Biton; Renaud Boistel; Rivka Rabinovich; Sarig Gafny; Vlad Brumfeld; Salvador Bailon

The Hula Painted Frog (Latonia nigriventer) is a rare frog species endemic to the Hula Valley, Israel. The species is the sole relict of a clade that was widespread mainly in Europe from the Oligocene until the beginning of the Pleistocene. The osteological characteristics of L. nigriventer are described based on X‐ray microtomography scans of extant specimens and Pleistocene bones from the Hula Valley, to elucidate the evolutionary history of Alytidae and more specifically of Latonia. Based on the osteological description of L. nigriventer, we now better understand the differences, between Latonia and its sister taxon Discoglossus. They differ mainly in their cranial structure with the reinforced skull of Latonia having powerful jaws. Latonia nigriventer can achieve great force while closing its jaws, due to increased adductor muscle insertion surfaces as expressed by the presence of an additional paracoronoid process and an enlarged upper margin of the postero‐lateral wall of the lower jaw. In addition, a wider pterygoid fossa and higher canthus postero‐lateralis of the frontoparietal, compared to that of Discoglossus, also suggest the presence of well‐developed adductor muscles. Furthermore, L. nigriventer have particularly strong skulls as expressed by: long articulations between different skull elements, interdigitation in the contact area between the nasals and between nasals and the frontoparietals, and fused frontoparietals. Both males and females L. nigriventer have very robust forelimbs, as indicated by well‐developed medial crests of the humerus. Based on limited eastern Mediterranean paleontological data, we can only suspect that the dispersal of Latonia into the Levant from Asia Minor occurred at some point during the Miocene or later. The first appearance of L. nigriventer in the Hula Valley, its current habitat, dates to approximately 780 thousand years ago at the archaeological site of Gesher Benot Ya‘aqov. J. Morphol. 277:1131–1145, 2016.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2011

The Early–Middle Pleistocene faunal assemblages of Gesher Benot Ya‘aqov: Inter-site variability ☆

Rivka Rabinovich; Rebecca Biton


Journal of Human Evolution | 2011

Land, lake, and fish: Investigation of fish remains from Gesher Benot Ya‘aqov (paleo-Lake Hula) ☆

Irit Zohar; Rebecca Biton


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2005

New morphometric parameters for assessment of body size in the fossil freshwater crab assemblage from the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya'aqov, Israel

Shoshana Ashkenazi; Uzi Motro; Naama Goren-Inbar; Rebecca Biton; Rivka Rabinovich


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

Ceramics in the Levantine Pre-Pottery Neolithic B: evidence from Kfar HaHoresh, Israel

Rebecca Biton; Yuval Goren; A. Nigel Goring-Morris


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2017

Freshwater turtle or tortoise? The exploitation of testudines at the Mousterian site of Nahal Mahanayeem Outlet, Hula Valley, Israel

Rebecca Biton; Gonen Sharon; Maya Oron; Tikvah Steiner; Rivka Rabinovich


Quaternary Research | 2018

Pleistocene amphibians and squamates from the Upper Jordan Rift Valley, Gesher Benot Ya’aqov and Nahal Mahanayeem Outlet (MIS 20–18 and MIS 4/3)

Rebecca Biton; Salvador Bailon; Naama Goren-Inbar; Gonen Sharon; Rivka Rabinovich


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2018

Finding of trout (Salmo cf. trutta) in the Northern Jordan Valley (Israel) at the end of the Pleistocene: Preliminary results

Aurélia Borvon; Anne Bridault; Rebecca Biton; Rivka Rabinovich; Marion Prevost; Hamudi Khalaily; François R. Valla

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Rivka Rabinovich

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Gonen Sharon

Tel-Hai Academic College

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Naama Goren-Inbar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Irit Zohar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Maya Oron

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Sarig Gafny

Ruppin Academic Center

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Vlad Brumfeld

Weizmann Institute of Science

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A. Nigel Goring-Morris

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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