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Research Achievements

September 14, 2015ã€¶Ä HIGHLIGHT

Updating human evolution through examination of technological innovation in stone tools

Assistant Prof. Seiji Kadowaki, ÅÝܽÊÓÆµ Museum and Graduate School of Environmental Studies at ÅÝܽÊÓÆµ, and his research group at the University Museum at the University of Tokyo reported a new hypothesis on the cultural adaptation ofHomo sapiensÌýduring the late Pleistocene and its implications on the demise of Neanderthals, one of archaic human groups that lived in Eurasia at that time.

The researchers suggested that one of te significant technological innovations, as observed in stone tools, was a result of the successful colonization of Europe byÌýHomo sapiens. This observation is congruent with recent chronological and genetic studies indicating the co-existence ofÌýHomo sapiensÌýand Neanderthals between ca. 45,000 and 40,000 years ago in Europe.
This study was published on April 25, 2015, in theÌýJournal of Human EvolutionÌýby Elsevier Ltd.Ìý

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