Dalila De Caro
@daliladecaro.bsky.social
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Lithic analysis
reposted by
Dalila De Caro
Harvati Lab
about 2 months ago
🎉 Huge congratulations to Dalila de Caro for successfully defending her PhD today!
@daliladecaro.bsky.social
🎊
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Meeting such outstanding colleagues was truly inspiring! Many thanks to the organisers of
#samu60
Conference on Vértesszőlős man.
about 2 months ago
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Dalila De Caro
Katerina Harvati
2 months ago
And today it was the turn of the Megalopolis delegation to present our work at Marathousa 1 (Greece) 🙂 With
[email protected]
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reposted by
Dalila De Caro
Katerina Harvati
2 months ago
A great pleasure to be invited, together with
@daliladecaro.bsky.social
, to participate in the symposium celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Vertesszolos discovery! Wonderful venue at the Hungarian National Museum 🤩 Many thanks to our hosts, the organizers G. Lengyel & Y. Zaidner
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We had the pleasure of presenting our new study on lithic analysis and spatial modelling of different sites in the Megalopolis Basin at the Lithic Studies Society Conference in Leicester. Many thanks to the organisers for their work!
@lithicstudiessoc.bsky.social
3 months ago
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CONEXP 2025 was just amazing! We presented our experiments, but we also enjoyed all the activities that
@traceolab.bsky.social
organised! A big thanks to all the organisers, participants and volunteers
3 months ago
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reposted by
Dalila De Caro
TraceoLab
3 months ago
What an amazing second day at CONEXP 2025! It’s been an inspiring day filled with presentations, discussions, cultural activities, and fresh perspectives on diverse topics. We’re excited for tomorrow!
#conexp2025
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reposted by
Dalila De Caro
Science Magazine
7 months ago
New discoveries from the Pleistocene-age Gantangqing site in southwestern China reveal a diverse collection of wooden tools dated from ~361,000 to 250,000 years ago, marking the earliest known evidence of complex wooden tool technology in East Asia. Learn more in Science:
scim.ag/4krE5y3
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Press release of our new paper. Read it also in English:
www.senckenberg.de/en/pressemel...
add a skeleton here at some point
7 months ago
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reposted by
Dalila De Caro
Katerina Harvati
7 months ago
Congratulations to PhD student Dalila DeCaro for the publication of her paper on the Marathousa 1 lithics at PLOS:
dx.plos.org/10.1371/jour...
! Well done Dalila!!
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Small flakes for sharp needs: Technological behaviour in the Lower Palaeolithic site of Marathousa 1, Greece
Marathousa 1 (~430 ka BP), located in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece, represents the earliest documented butchery site in the Southern Balkans, providing clear evidence of a direct association between ...
https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0324958
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New paper alert! We looked at how Middle Pleistocene hominins in the southern Balkans produced Small tools around 430 Ka. The results show a flexible, locally adapted technology, reflecting “a strategy that moves beyond the dichotomy of expediency and curation”.
journals.plos.org/plosone/arti...
7 months ago
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TraCEr International seminar 2025 at
@tracer-leiza.bsky.social
Amazing researchers, amazing people.
9 months ago
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reposted by
Dalila De Caro
Justin Pargeter
11 months ago
Here, we propose a new perspective on early stone tool technology: emulation of naturally occurring sharp-edged stones (naturaliths) instead of inventing via 'Eureka!' moments. Nature provided the blueprint; hominins took it further. đź”—
doi.org/10.1111/arcm...
#Archaeology
#Stonetools
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Dalila De Caro
Carl Zimmer
11 months ago
And in news from 1.5 million years ago: early humans made axes out of elephant bones. Here's my story. Gift link:
nyti.ms/3F7llVt
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Trove of Ancient Axes Shows Early Humans Made Tools From Bones (Gift Article)
Deep in a trench in Tanzania, researchers found dozens of tools crafted from animal bones some 1.5 million years old.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/05/science/early-human-bone-tools-axes.html?unlocked_article_code=1.1k4.5XGB.SAbr4WdjbBjG&smid=url-share
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Dalila De Caro
Biological Anthropology
11 months ago
New fossils described in the Journal of Human Evolution - The first articulated Paranthropus robustus hip, femur, and tibia from Swartkrans (~2.3–1.7 Ma) reveal one of the smallest known adult hominins. Morphological analysis provides new insights into Early Pleistocene locomotion:
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First articulating os coxae, femur, and tibia of a small adult Paranthropus robustus from Member 1 (Hanging Remnant) of the Swartkrans Formation, South Africa
Since paleontological work began there in 1948, Swartkrans (South Africa) has yielded hundreds of Early Pleistocene hominin fossils, currently attribu…
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0047248424001556
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