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New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf
by
O'Connor, Sue
in
Anthropology
/ Antiquity
/ Archaeological research
/ Archaeology
/ Colonies
/ Colonization
/ East Timor
/ Generalities
/ Glacial epoch
/ History of colonization
/ History of travels
/ Hominids
/ Homo floresiensis
/ Homo sapiens
/ Human beings
/ human colonisation
/ Human paleontology
/ Human settlements
/ Humans
/ Ice ages
/ Indonesia
/ Island Southeast Asia
/ Islands
/ Man
/ Methodology and general studies
/ Neanthropus
/ Organisation and history of research
/ Pleistocene
/ Population transfers
/ Prehistory and protohistory
/ Settlement archaeology
2007
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New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf
by
O'Connor, Sue
in
Anthropology
/ Antiquity
/ Archaeological research
/ Archaeology
/ Colonies
/ Colonization
/ East Timor
/ Generalities
/ Glacial epoch
/ History of colonization
/ History of travels
/ Hominids
/ Homo floresiensis
/ Homo sapiens
/ Human beings
/ human colonisation
/ Human paleontology
/ Human settlements
/ Humans
/ Ice ages
/ Indonesia
/ Island Southeast Asia
/ Islands
/ Man
/ Methodology and general studies
/ Neanthropus
/ Organisation and history of research
/ Pleistocene
/ Population transfers
/ Prehistory and protohistory
/ Settlement archaeology
2007
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New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf
by
O'Connor, Sue
in
Anthropology
/ Antiquity
/ Archaeological research
/ Archaeology
/ Colonies
/ Colonization
/ East Timor
/ Generalities
/ Glacial epoch
/ History of colonization
/ History of travels
/ Hominids
/ Homo floresiensis
/ Homo sapiens
/ Human beings
/ human colonisation
/ Human paleontology
/ Human settlements
/ Humans
/ Ice ages
/ Indonesia
/ Island Southeast Asia
/ Islands
/ Man
/ Methodology and general studies
/ Neanthropus
/ Organisation and history of research
/ Pleistocene
/ Population transfers
/ Prehistory and protohistory
/ Settlement archaeology
2007
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New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf
Journal Article
New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf
2007
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Overview
New dates by which modern humans reached East Timor prompts this very useful update of the colonisation of Island Southeast Asia. The author addresses all the difficult questions: why are the dates for modern humans in Australia earlier than they are in Island Southeast Asia? Which route did they use to get there? If they used the southern route, why or how did they manage to bypass Flores, where Homo floresiensis, the famous non-sapiens hominin known to the world as the ‘hobbit’ was already in residence? New work at the rock shelter of Jerimalai suggests some answers and new research directions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press,Portland Press
Subject
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