- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 948
- author: kunstskole
10:35
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 1 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, ...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: kunstskole
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 1 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, prehistorical cultures beginning somewhere in very late geological history, and generally continuing until that culture either develops writing or other methods of record-keeping, or it makes significant contact with another culture that has. The very earliest human artifacts showing evidence of workmanship with an artistic purpose are a subject of some debate; it is clear that such workmanship existed by 40000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic era. From the Upper Palaeolithic through the Mesolithic, cave paintings and portable art such as figurines and beads predominated, with decorative figured workings also seen on some utilitarian objects. In the Neolithic evidence of early pottery appeared, as did sculpture and the construction of megaliths. Early rock art also first appeared in the Neolithic. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age brought additional media available for use in making art, an increase in stylistic diversity, and the creation of objects that did not have any obvious function other than art. It also saw the development in some areas of artisans, a class of people specializing in the production of art, as well as early writing systems. By the Iron Age, civilizations with writing had arisen from Ancient Egypt to Ancient China.
- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 948
- author: kunstskole
9:54
North Africa History (Inferior Paleolithic to Epipaleolithic Era's)
the Amazigh "Berbers" are the first peoples of Africa between 3Million to 700000Bc Achaule...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: samysamy25
North Africa History (Inferior Paleolithic to Epipaleolithic Era's)
the Amazigh "Berbers" are the first peoples of Africa between 3Million to 700000Bc Achaulean culture www.arabicnews.com hnhp.cnrs.fr books.google.co.ma www.eva.mpg.de www.pnas.org mathildasanthropologyblog.wordpress.com www.bladi.net the Amazighs or Berbers were Cro-magnons or Aterian Race (Atlantico-Mediterranean Race) originated from 200000 years they left north africa(Ibero-Mauresian expansion of the upper Paleolithic era) and returned after they beginning to conquer Europe again to 80000 -30.000 years there was a great migration back to Europe/Eurasia from North Africa, taking care of large populations of North Africa called Amazigh (Atlantico-Mediterranean Race) or they found other North African civilizations and new expansion to the Mesolithic and Neolithic age's to the Middle East and the Horn of Africa, their migration to these new destinations cause small unknown civilizations before the Neolithic age in the middle of the Sahara between Africa and the Middle East on giving birth to Afro-Asian languages such as Semitic languages,ancient Egyptian. influence by the language of the Capsian expansion appoint Tamazight language which is the mother language of Afro-Asian and Latin languages and Berber languages. origin civilization of Berbers population : inferior Paleolithic : Achaulean civilization 1.7Million years First burials Paleolithic-700.000 years www.kabyle.com Mousterian civilization "Cro-magnon" or "Iber-Aterian200.000 -35.000years ago www.kabyle.com ...
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 28522
- author: samysamy25
0:40
810 Radiocarbon Dates of the British Upper Paleolithic/Mesolithic
Animation visualising calibrated radiocarbon dates from the Council for British Archaeolog...
published: 13 Dec 2011
author: TemporalMapping
810 Radiocarbon Dates of the British Upper Paleolithic/Mesolithic
Animation visualising calibrated radiocarbon dates from the Council for British Archaeology's Radiocarbon Database. Spatial Resolution/Extent: 30 arcseconds, Great Britain and Ireland. Temporal Resolution/Extent: 15000 to 5000 BP. 250 years per second.
- published: 13 Dec 2011
- views: 361
- author: TemporalMapping
2:07
The look of the Cro-Magnon men
Skulls and facial reconstructions of upper-paleolithic Cro-Magnons from France, Kostenki, ...
published: 01 Oct 2011
author: RealSarmatians
The look of the Cro-Magnon men
Skulls and facial reconstructions of upper-paleolithic Cro-Magnons from France, Kostenki, Oberkassel, Predmost and Brünn. The last pic shows a modern survivor of the facial type of the Cro-Magnons.
- published: 01 Oct 2011
- views: 8298
- author: RealSarmatians
85:14
JUNIPER FUSE: Upper Paleolithic Imagination & the Construction of the Underworld
Victor M. Bearg Science and Humanities Scholars Speaker Series Clayton Eshleman, American ...
published: 10 Oct 2012
author: ULSeriesCMU
JUNIPER FUSE: Upper Paleolithic Imagination & the Construction of the Underworld
Victor M. Bearg Science and Humanities Scholars Speaker Series Clayton Eshleman, American poet, translator and editor, Professor Emeritus, Eastern Michigan University, "...has explored and inspected almost all of the great cave art of southwestern Europe including many caves that are not open to the public and require special permission. Now with visionary imagination, informed poetic speculation, deep insight, breathtaking leaps of mind, Eshleman draws out the underground of myth, psychology, prehistory, and the first turn of the human mind toward the modern. Juniper Fuse opens us up to our ancient selves: we might be weirder (and also better) than we thought." (Quote by Gary Snyder, Pulitzer Prize winning American poet)
- published: 10 Oct 2012
- views: 36
- author: ULSeriesCMU
4:19
treasures of the upper paleolithic Display
...
published: 03 May 2012
author: robinrome1
treasures of the upper paleolithic Display
- published: 03 May 2012
- views: 37
- author: robinrome1
5:30
Cave Hands
Original video extracted from: www.youtube.com In the history of art, prehistoric art is a...
published: 20 Mar 2009
author: HistoriaDaArte1
Cave Hands
Original video extracted from: www.youtube.com In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, prehistorical cultures beginning somewhere in very late geological history, and generally continuing until that culture either develops writing or other methods of record-keeping, or it makes significant contact with another culture that has. The very earliest human artifacts showing evidence of workmanship with an artistic purpose are a subject of some debate; it is clear that such workmanship existed by 40000 years ago in the Upper Palaeolithic era. From the Upper Palaeolithic through the Mesolithic, cave paintings and portable art like figurines and beads predominated, with decorative figured workings also seen on some utilitarian objects. In the Neolithic evidence of early pottery appeared, as did sculpture and the construction of megaliths. Early rock art also first appeared in the Neolithic. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age brought another increase in mediums used for art, an increase in stylistic diversity, and the creation of objects that did not have any obvious function other than art. It also saw the development in some areas of artisans, a class of people specializing in the production of art, as well as early writing systems. By the Iron Age, civilizations with writing had arisen from Ancient Egypt to Ancient China. Many indigenous peoples from around the world continued to produce artistics works distinctive to their ...
- published: 20 Mar 2009
- views: 15365
- author: HistoriaDaArte1
1:47
Cro-Magnon men of Sunghir
Reconstructions of 20 to 30 thousand years old remains of the Gravettian Cro-Magnons of Su...
published: 01 Oct 2011
author: RealSarmatians
Cro-Magnon men of Sunghir
Reconstructions of 20 to 30 thousand years old remains of the Gravettian Cro-Magnons of Sungir / Russia. We don't know which language these upper-paleolithic people spoke, but anthropologically, they formed the base of the Cro-Magnoid element in the later Finno-Ugrians.
- published: 01 Oct 2011
- views: 3594
- author: RealSarmatians
9:06
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 2 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, ...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: kunstskole
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 2 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, prehistorical cultures beginning somewhere in very late geological history, and generally continuing until that culture either develops writing or other methods of record-keeping, or it makes significant contact with another culture that has. The very earliest human artifacts showing evidence of workmanship with an artistic purpose are a subject of some debate; it is clear that such workmanship existed by 40000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic era. From the Upper Palaeolithic through the Mesolithic, cave paintings and portable art such as figurines and beads predominated, with decorative figured workings also seen on some utilitarian objects. In the Neolithic evidence of early pottery appeared, as did sculpture and the construction of megaliths. Early rock art also first appeared in the Neolithic. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age brought additional media available for use in making art, an increase in stylistic diversity, and the creation of objects that did not have any obvious function other than art. It also saw the development in some areas of artisans, a class of people specializing in the production of art, as well as early writing systems. By the Iron Age, civilizations with writing had arisen from Ancient Egypt to Ancient China.
- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 620
- author: kunstskole
8:16
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 3 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, ...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: kunstskole
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 3 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, prehistorical cultures beginning somewhere in very late geological history, and generally continuing until that culture either develops writing or other methods of record-keeping, or it makes significant contact with another culture that has. The very earliest human artifacts showing evidence of workmanship with an artistic purpose are a subject of some debate; it is clear that such workmanship existed by 40000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic era. From the Upper Palaeolithic through the Mesolithic, cave paintings and portable art such as figurines and beads predominated, with decorative figured workings also seen on some utilitarian objects. In the Neolithic evidence of early pottery appeared, as did sculpture and the construction of megaliths. Early rock art also first appeared in the Neolithic. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age brought additional media available for use in making art, an increase in stylistic diversity, and the creation of objects that did not have any obvious function other than art. It also saw the development in some areas of artisans, a class of people specializing in the production of art, as well as early writing systems. By the Iron Age, civilizations with writing had arisen from Ancient Egypt to Ancient China.
- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 406
- author: kunstskole
9:42
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 4 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, ...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: kunstskole
Prehistoric Europeans People Who Invented Art 4 of 4
More: gekos.no In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate, prehistorical cultures beginning somewhere in very late geological history, and generally continuing until that culture either develops writing or other methods of record-keeping, or it makes significant contact with another culture that has. The very earliest human artifacts showing evidence of workmanship with an artistic purpose are a subject of some debate; it is clear that such workmanship existed by 40000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic era. From the Upper Palaeolithic through the Mesolithic, cave paintings and portable art such as figurines and beads predominated, with decorative figured workings also seen on some utilitarian objects. In the Neolithic evidence of early pottery appeared, as did sculpture and the construction of megaliths. Early rock art also first appeared in the Neolithic. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age brought additional media available for use in making art, an increase in stylistic diversity, and the creation of objects that did not have any obvious function other than art. It also saw the development in some areas of artisans, a class of people specializing in the production of art, as well as early writing systems. By the Iron Age, civilizations with writing had arisen from Ancient Egypt to Ancient China.
- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 667
- author: kunstskole
67:34
The Final Neanderthals by Dr Rachel Wood, at ANU
Dr Rachel Wood, Research School of Earth Sciences, ANU, gives new insights from radiocarbo...
published: 14 Mar 2012
author: ANUchannel
The Final Neanderthals by Dr Rachel Wood, at ANU
Dr Rachel Wood, Research School of Earth Sciences, ANU, gives new insights from radiocarbon dating the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Iberia. This lecture was part of the Centre for Archaeological Research Lecture Series.
- published: 14 Mar 2012
- views: 1088
- author: ANUchannel
15:06
Paleolithic Cave Arts in Northern Spain(1) El Castillo Cave, Cantabria
Is this the world's oldest cave painting ? Over the summer of 2004 from the autumn of 1997...
published: 23 Aug 2012
author: TexnaiDigitalArchive
Paleolithic Cave Arts in Northern Spain(1) El Castillo Cave, Cantabria
Is this the world's oldest cave painting ? Over the summer of 2004 from the autumn of 1997, we executed photoVR shooting at 23 major caves that are located in Northern Spain to build a multimedia database of the Paleolithic Arts in Northern Spain. This is a documentary of that time we shot at El Castillo cave in April, 1998. El Castillo cave is well known for its long sequence of stratigraphy that goes back to the late Acheulian of about 150000 years BP from the end of the Upper Paleolithic and it is providing valuable information about the trandition, or replacement, between the Neanderthal populations and the Homo Sapiens. In this cave can be seen hundreds of wall paintings of mainly Upper Paleolithic period. Uranium-series disequilibrium dating was executed this year by the team organized by Prof. Alistair Pike of University of Bristol, UK for calcite deposits overlying art found in 11 caves in Northern Spain and the results demonstrated that some paintings of El Castillo extended back at least to the Early Aurignacian period, with minimum ages of 40.8 thousand years for a red disk, 37.3 thousand years for a negative hand. If this dating is correct, the red disk becomes about 4.000 years earlier than the paintings of Grotte Chauvet that has been said to be the world's oldest, and not only that, it can not be ruled out that the earliest paintings were created by Neanderthals, which were estimated to present in the Cantabrian regions until at least 42000 to 36000 years ...
- published: 23 Aug 2012
- views: 693
- author: TexnaiDigitalArchive
Youtube results:
1:43
Undo Cave Official Trailer HD - Archaeology at University College Cork
Rod Pinhasi's research interests include the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in the T...
published: 30 Sep 2011
author: UCCIreland
Undo Cave Official Trailer HD - Archaeology at University College Cork
Rod Pinhasi's research interests include the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition in the Transcaucasus, the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Europe, and the evolution and dispersal of early Holocene populations.The principal objective of the project is to develop chronometrically dated regional archaeological sequences Middle and early Upper Palaeolithic of the Caucasus (~125-30 ka) and to date all available hominin fossils that are associated with archaeological finds from this temporal phase. Other projects include an investigation of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, demic diffusion, and dispersals in the Near East and Europe. This includes research on the origins and spread of agriculture in the Near East and Europe, as well as a study of spatio-temporal dynamics and phylogenetic affinities of early Mesolithic European populations. He is also collaborating on aa cross-disciplinary investigation of the biocultural, functional and archaeogenetic aspects of the Neolithic process in human societies from the Levant and Danube Gorges regions.
- published: 30 Sep 2011
- views: 625
- author: UCCIreland
1:35
Grotta di Fumane Italy - Upper Paleolithic Cave Art 2012
New dating techniques pushing art in this cave and some in Northern Spain well over 30000 ...
published: 31 Dec 2012
author: Robertmsorenson
Grotta di Fumane Italy - Upper Paleolithic Cave Art 2012
New dating techniques pushing art in this cave and some in Northern Spain well over 30000 years ago questioning if a lot of the upper paleolithic art in southern Europe is Neanderthal based on not just moderns.
- published: 31 Dec 2012
- views: 5
- author: Robertmsorenson
9:19
Invasion of the Cro Magnon Giants to North America.wmv
Giant skeletons bearing Upper Paleolithic archaic traits of a sloping forehead, protruding...
published: 09 Dec 2010
author: TheMoundbuilder
Invasion of the Cro Magnon Giants to North America.wmv
Giant skeletons bearing Upper Paleolithic archaic traits of a sloping forehead, protruding brow ridge and massive jaws are found within the skeletal remains of the Maritime Archaic in the Boreal and Atlantic periods from 6800 BC-2250 BC Giant human skeletal remains bearing these archaic features are shown the extent of the Eurasian continent to the northern Japanese Islands and Aleutians. Historical evidence of giant skeletons, with archaic features and double rows of teeth are presented along the Pacific seaboard of California and Oregon. On the Atlantic are also giant skeletons from New York city, to Florida; some of which also have a double row of teeth. More giant human skeletons are shown near the Gulf of Mexico. A strange artifact known as the "charm stone" is found the extent of Eurasia, the Pacific and Atlantic coasts associated with the Cro Magnon giants. It also found within the burial mounds in the Ohio Valley along with the hundreds of documented giant skeletons, some also endowed with a double row of teeth.
- published: 09 Dec 2010
- views: 9564
- author: TheMoundbuilder
21:50
The Caucasian Presence In Africa Pt 1
Eurasia Levant Iberia Mediterranean Near East Middle East Asia Africa Sahara Libya Egypt N...
published: 26 Oct 2012
author: 7phoenician7
The Caucasian Presence In Africa Pt 1
Eurasia Levant Iberia Mediterranean Near East Middle East Asia Africa Sahara Libya Egypt Nile Valley Nubia Cushite Sudan Mali Upper Paleolithic Epipalaeolithic Mesolithic Neolithic Hofmeyr Aterian Qafzeh Skhul Pestera cu Oase Berber Canary Islands Guanche Caucasoid Caucasian Gobero Niger Mauritania Maghreb Sahel Aterian Mechta-Afalou Mechtoid Dabban Ibero-Maurusian Capsian Taforalt Abiod Ounanian Kiffian Tenerian Nazlet Khater M1 U6 H R1b J1 Borean Nostrtic language Afroasiatic dental mass-reduced morphology phenotype Khoisan Chadic Sub Sahara negroid congoid capoid Iwo Eleru Asselar
- published: 26 Oct 2012
- views: 328
- author: 7phoenician7