Неандертальцы: история несостоявшегося человечества
Шрифт:
Chase P. G., Teilhol V.The fossil human remains // P. G. Chase, A. Deb'enath, H. L. Dibble, S. P. McPherron (eds). The Cave of Font'echevade: Recent Excavations and Their Paleoanthropological Implications. New York: Cambridge University Press. 2009. P. 103–116.
Chiarelli B.Spongiform encephalopathy, cannibalism and Neanderthals extinction // HE. 2004. N 19. P. 81–92.
Churchill S. E.Cold adaptation, heterochrony and Neandertals // EA. 1998. N 7. P. 46–61.
Churchill S. E.Bioenergetic perspectives on Neanderthal thermoregulatory and activity budgets // K. Harvati and T. Harrison (eds). Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives. Dordrecht: Springer. 2006. P. 113–133.
Churchill S. E., Franciscus R. G., McKean-Peraza H. A., Daniel J. A., Warren B. R.Shanidar 3 Neandertal rib puncture wound and paleolithic weaponry // JHE. 2009. N 57. P. 163–178.
Cloutier C. T., Broadfield D. C., Wolf T., Halloran A. R.A semi-free ranging chimpanzee (Pan Troglodytes) gives birth at 65 years of age: Implications for delayed reproductive senescence // AJPA. 2009. N 138 (Supplement 49). P. 107.
Condemi S.The Neanderthals: Homo neanderthalensisor Homo sapiens neanderthalensis? Is there a contradiction between the paleogenetic and the paleoanthropological data? // J. Orschiedt and G.-C. Weniger (eds). Neanderthals and Modern Humans — Discussing the Transition. Central and Eastern Europe from 50.000–30.000 B. P. Mettmann: Neanderthal Museum. 2000. P. 287–295.
Coolidge F. L., Wynn T.The Rise of Homo sapiens: The Evolution of Modern Thinking. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.
Coon C. S.The Origin of Races. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1962.
Cooper J. H.Did cannibalis and spongiform encephalopathy contribute to the demise of the Neanderthals // MQ. 2000. N 41. P. 175–180.
Curnoe D. et al.Timing and tempo of primate speciation // JEB. 2006. N 19. P. 59–65.
Czarnetzki A., Gaudzinski S., Pusch C. M.Hominid skull fragments from Late Pleistocene layers in Leine Valley (Sarstedt, District of Hildesheim, Germany) // JHE. N 41. P. 133–140.
D’Errico F.The invisible frontier. A multiple species model for the origin of behavioral modernity // EA. 2003. N 12. P. 188–202.
D’Errico F.The origin of humanity and modern cultures: Archaeology’s view // Diogenes. 2007. N 214. P. 122–133.
D’Errico F., Go~ni M. F. S.Neandertal extinction and the millennial scale climatic variability of OIS 3 // QSR. 2003. N 22. P. 769–788.
D’Errico F., Zilh~ao J., Julien M., Baffier D., Pelegrin J.Neanderthal acculturation in Western Europe? A Critical review of the evidence and its interpretation // CAn. 1998. N 39 (Supplement). P. 1–44.
D’Errico F., Henshilwood C., Lawson G., Vanhaeren M., Tillier A.-M., Soressi M., Bresson F., Maureille B., Nowell A., Lakarra J., Backwell L., Julien M.Archaeological evidence for the emergence of language, symbolism, and music — an alternative multidisciplinary perspective // JWP. 2003. N 17. P. 1–70.
Davies R., Underdown S.The Neanderthals: a social synthesis // CAJ. 2006. N 16. P. 145–164.
Dean D., Hublin J.-J., Holloway R., Ziegler R.On the phylogenetic position of the pre-Neanderthal specimen from Reilingen, Germany // JHE. 1998. N 34. P. 485–508.
Deaner R. O. et al.Overall brain size, and not encephalization quotient, best predicts cognitive ability across non-human primates // BBE. 2007. N 70. P. 115–124.
de Beaune S. A.Essai d’une classification typologique des galets et plaquettes utilis'es au Pal'eolithique // GP. 1989. N 31. P. 27–64.
Deb'enath A., Dibble H.Handbook of Paleolithic typology. Philadelphia: The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1994.
Defleur A.Les s'epultures moust'eriennes. Paris: CNRS, 1993.
Defleur A., White T., Valensi P., Slimak L., Cr'egur-Bonnoure 'E.Neanderthal cannibalism at Moula-Guercy, Ard`eche, France // Science. 1999. N 286. P. 128–131.
De Giorgio M., Jacobsson M., Rosenberg N. A.Explaining worldwide patterns of human genetic variation using a coalescent-based serial founder model of migration outward from Africa // PNAS. 2009. N 106. P. 16057–16062.
DeGusta D., Gilbert W. H., Turner S. P.Hypoglossal canal size and hominid speech // PNAS. 1999. N 96. P. 1800–1804.
De Miguel C., Henneberg M.Variation in hominid brain size: How much is due to method? // HOMO. 2001. N 52. P. 2–56.
Doyle W. J., Johnston O.On the meaning of increased fluctuating dental asymmetry: a cross-population study // AJPA. 1977. N 46. P. 127–134.
Drell J. L. L.Neanderthal: A history of interpretation // OJA 19. 2000. P. 1–24.
Duarte C., Mauricio J., Pettitt P. B., Souto P., Trinkaus E., Van der Plicht H., Zilh~ao J.The early Upper Paleolithic human skeleton from the Abrigo do Lagar Velho (Portugal) and modern human emergence in Iberia // PNAS. 1999. N 96. P. 7604–7609.
Duarte C., Hillson S. W., Holliday T. W., Trinkaus E.The Lagar Velho 1 humaqn skeletal inventory // J. Zilh~ao and E. Trinkaus (eds). Portrait of the Artist as a Child. The Gravettian Human Skeleton From the Abrigo do Lagar Velho and Its Archeological Context. (Trabalhos de Arqueologia 22). Lisboa: Instituto Portugu^es de Arqueologia. 2002. P. 220–241.
Duchin L. E.The evolution of articulate speech: comparative anatomy of the oral cavity in Pan and Homo // JHE. 1990. N 19. P. 687–697.