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Featured researches published by Sibeli Viana.


Antiquity | 2014

A new late Pleistocene archaeological sequence in South America: the Vale da Pedra Furada (Piauí, Brazil)

Eric Boëda; Ignacio Clemente-Conte; Michel Fontugne; Christelle Lahaye; Mario Pino; Gisele Daltrini Felice; Niède Guidon; Sirlei Hoeltz; Antoine Lourdeau; Marina Pagli; Anne-Marie Pessis; Sibeli Viana; Amélie da Costa; Eric Douville

The date of the first settlement of the Americas remains a contentious subject. Previous claims for very early occupation at Pedra Furada in Brazil were not universally accepted (see Meltzer et al. 1994). New work at the rockshelter of Boqueirão da Pedra Furada and at the nearby open-air site of Vale da Pedra Furada have however produced new evidence for human occupation extending back more than 20 000 years. The argument is supported by a series of 14C and OSL dates, and by technical analysis of the stone tool assemblage. The authors conclude that the currently accepted narrative of human settlement in South America will have to be re-thought. The article is followed by a series of comments, rounded off by a reply from the authors.


PaleoAmerica | 2016

New Data on a Pleistocene Archaeological Sequence in South America: Toca do Sítio do Meio, Piauí, Brazil

Eric Boëda; Roxane Rocca; Amélie da Costa; Michel Fontugne; Christine Hatté; Ignacio Clemente-Conte; Janaina C. Santos; Lívia de Oliveira e Lucas; Gisele Daltrini Felice; Antoine Lourdeau; Ximena S. Villagran; Maria Gluchy; Marcos Paulo de Melo Ramos; Sibeli Viana; Christelle Lahaye; Niède Guidon; Christophe Griggo; Mario Pino; Anne-Marie Pessis; Carolina Borges; Bruno Gato

Sítio do Meio, discovered in the 1990s, showed a sedimentary sequence clearly composed of two sets of deposits separated by a zone of large rockfall from the massive collapse of the shelters overhang. The bottom set, slightly more than 60 cm thick, was trapped between the bedrock (upon which it rested) and the lower part of the roof fall (reaching more than 1 m in the excavation area), and yielded some charcoal without other archaeological material. New excavations, however, have revealed the presence of artifacts, additional charcoal, and an alignment of sandstone blocks providing clear boundaries for the artifact concentration. The typological and technological composition of the artifacts is classic, with tools made by shaping high-quality quartz pebbles and tools made on shaping chips or on chips obtained by bipolar percussion of quartz blocks. Quartzite was also used, but only in the manufacture of larger tools, of certain types. The toolkit is made of several convergent pieces, denticulates, rostres, scrapers, and end scrapers. Radiocarbon dating results indicate a Pleistocene age, corresponding to the end of the mid-Upper Pleistocene (MIS3). These dates confirm that Sítio do Meio is the seventh Pleistocene stratigraphic sequence known from a 20-km-radius zone, coming from different sedimentary horizons, testifying to a human presence that extends from MIS3 until the middle Holocene, in this region of Piauí. Particularly, we observed that this occupation still has periodic gaps, with phases of occupation occurring in either short or long periods. With the new data, we are able to consider the cultural specificities of each set in the context of climate data to better understand the diversity of occupation within a single territory, for example behavioral variation in the management of space, adaptive responses to environmental pressures, or potentially both at the same time.


Antiquity | 2014

The peopling of South America: expanding the evidence

Eric Boëda; Christelle Lahaye; Gisele Daltrini Felice; Niède Guidon; Sirlei Hoeltz; Antoine Lourdeau; Anne-Marie Pessis; Sibeli Viana; Ignacio Clemente-Conte; Mario Pino; Michel Fontugne; Marina Pagli; Amélie da Costa

The objective of the Franco-Brazilian mission, established in 2008 at the request of and in collaboration with Brazilian researchers, was to address the issue of the earliest peopling of South America as evidenced in north-eastern Brazil. Such early settlement had been suggested, and in our view demonstrated, by the previous research undertaken at the site of Boqueirão da Pedra Furada. Yet like any discovery, this occurred at a particular point in the history of research. Its acceptance depends on many factors that have often been difficult to accommodate as the evidence has unfolded. Still more fundamental has been the reasoned argument presented by the discoverers, since that is the basis of knowledge. The increasing number of sites and the conjunction of multiple approaches—stratigraphic, taphonomic, experimental, technological and functional—play a key role in the construction of this argument. Whether or not it is accepted will be part of the history of science. With the sites of Boqueirão, Sı́tio do Meio, Tira Peia and now Vale, we know that the settlement of this region of Piauı́ began more than 20–25 000 years ago, and occupation persisted throughout the entire Holocene period. When the data from these sites are compared with those from Santa Elina in the Mato Grosso, the antiquity of human settlement is confirmed and the area occupied at this early period is expanded. Another step has been taken; further steps must clearly follow in order to advance further. We now need to orient our questions differently by addressing behavioural issues.


Revista Cadernos do Ceom | 2016

Pré-história na foz do rio Chapecó

Antoine Lourdeau; Mirian Carbonera; Marcos César Pereira Santos; Sirlei Hoeltz; Michel Fontugne; Christine Hatté; Sérgio Francisco Serafim Monteiro da Silva; Pierluigi Rosina; Lívia de Oliveira e Lucas; Amélie da Costa; Cécile Foucher; Juliana Betarello Ramalho; Francieli Kuczkovski; Juliano Bitencourt Campos; Sibeli Viana; Ana Lucia Herberts

O alto rio Uruguai e uma area importante para compreender o povoamento pre-historico da bacia do rio da Prata. Nela foram localizados sitios de cacadores-coletores, referentes ao passado mais antigo da regiao, e de grupos ceramistas relacionados as unidades arqueologicas Tupiguarani e Taquara-Itarare. Este artigo apresenta os primeiros resultados das pesquisas realizadas no sitio ACH-LP-07 situado proximo a foz do rio Chapeco na margem direita do rio Uruguai, no oeste de Santa Catarina. O mesmo apresentou varias ocupacoes por cacadores-coletores no inicio do Holoceno, caracterizadas por uma variabilidade nas producoes de pedra lascada, onde se destaca a producao de lâminas por uma debitagem especifica. No ultimo milenio o local tambem foi povoado por grupos ceramistas Guarani. O sitio tem trazido diferentes contribuicoes a respeito dessas antigas sociedades, especialmente as modalidades de ocupacao e de sucessao dos grupos humanos no alto rio Uruguai.


Revista Cadernos do Ceom | 2016

O Complexo Arqueológico de Palestina de Goiás/Brasil – uma avaliação dos conjuntos líticos mais antigos em contextualização macrorregional

Sibeli Viana; Marcos Paulo M. Ramos; Julio Cezar Rubin de Rubin; Maira Barberi; Eric Boëda

Neste artigo apresentamos resultados iniciais advindos da retomada de pesquisa arqueologica no municipio de Palestina de Goias (Regiao Arqueologica de Caiaponia). Apesar da expressiva abrangencia tematica da pesquisa na regiao, este trabalho foca na variabilidade tecnologica presente nos conjuntos liticos de dois sitios da regiao: GO-Cp-16 e GO-Cp-17 e seus aspectos geomorfologicos. Esses sitios sao relacionados ao periodo do Holoceno Medio e a cultura material aqui analisada foi, majoritariamente, obtida pelas escavacoes realizadas entre 1979 e 1981. Tambem traz reflexoes sobre o contexto macrorregional em que estes sitios se encontram.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Human occupation in South America by 20,000 BC: the Toca da Tira Peia site, Piauí, Brazil

Christelle Lahaye; Marion Hernandez; Eric Boëda; Gisele Daltrini Felice; Niède Guidon; Sirlei Hoeltz; Antoine Lourdeau; Marina Pagli; Anne-Marie Pessis; Michel Rasse; Sibeli Viana


Archive | 2013

The Late-Pleistocene Industries of Piauí, Brazil: New Data

Eric Boëda; Antoine Lourdeau; Christelle Lahaye; Gisele Daltrini Felice; Sibeli Viana; Ignacio Clemente-Conte; Mario Pino; Michel Fontugne; Sirlei Hoeltz; Niède Guidon; Anne-Marie Pessis; Amélie da Costa; Marina Pagli


Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2014

Early Holocene blade technology in southern Brazil

Antoine Lourdeau; Sirlei Hoeltz; Sibeli Viana


Journal of Lithic Studies | 2017

Debitagem laminar no Sul do Brasil: Habemus nucleos!

Antoine Lourdeau; Mirian Carbonera; Sirlei Hoeltz; Marcos César Pereira Santos; Lívia de Oliveira e Lucas; Amélie da Costa; Sibeli Viana


Revista do Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia | 2015

Um Novo Conceito de Lascamento no Sul do Brasil: debitagem laminar na foz do rio Chapecó (SC/RS)

Sirlei Hoeltz; Antoine Lourdeau; Sibeli Viana

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Anne-Marie Pessis

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Gisele Daltrini Felice

Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco

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Niède Guidon

École Normale Supérieure

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Ignacio Clemente-Conte

Spanish National Research Council

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Mario Pino

Austral University of Chile

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Michel Fontugne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lívia de Oliveira e Lucas

Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco

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