Eastern Central Europe’s earliest shelters

HOME aims to uncover and analyze Palaeolithic shelters in East-Central Europe to understand human adaptation and survival strategies in harsh climates during the Late Pleistocene.

Subsidie
€ 1.997.921
2024

Projectdetails

Introduction

From penthouses to igloos, homes are a cornerstone of human society, deeply entrenched in our evolutionary past. Their staggering array of architecture simultaneously shapes and reflects our sociocultural traditions, structures our local economies, and has enabled us to inhabit all four corners of the earth. Yet surprisingly little is known about their earliest forms: Palaeolithic shelters. This is because no systematic attempts have been made to target their early archaeological signatures.

Project Overview

HOME will search for a diversity of Palaeolithic shelters during the Late Pleistocene through informed systematic surveys and excavations of archaeological sites in East-Central Europe. This region is significant because early mammoth bone structures suggest precocious shelters, but the record remains inconclusive.

The project's goal is to uncover and assess a variety of Palaeolithic shelters with the aim to understand the diverse ways that humans lived and survived in some of the coldest, harshest climates.

Objectives

The objectives of the project are to:

  1. Recognize the factors that influence the location and design of forager shelters through a goal-directed study of ethnographic documentation.
  2. Develop new geophysical methods to identify open-air shelter residues in large-scale archaeological surveys.
  3. Determine how one of the earliest unambiguous built structures, a mammoth bone structure, was used with the latest techniques in archaeological science.
  4. Compare and contrast how these open-air shelters relate to a regional cave occupation through targeted excavations.

Expected Results

The results will elucidate how our ancestors adapted to past climate change and expanded into new biomes, ultimately leading to our ubiquitous population of the earth.

Significance

In addition to its significance to archaeology and anthropology, the outcomes have implications for theories of culture, evolution, and human resilience by helping us understand the physical building blocks of early societies.

Financiële details & Tijdlijn

Financiële details

Subsidiebedrag€ 1.997.921
Totale projectbegroting€ 1.997.921

Tijdlijn

Startdatum1-4-2024
Einddatum31-3-2029
Subsidiejaar2024

Partners & Locaties

Projectpartners

  • UNIVERSITEIT LEIDENpenvoerder

Land(en)

Netherlands

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