Paleoanthropology Society Meetings

The Paleoanthropology Society has released its finalized schedule of talks for the upcoming annual meetings. My spring conference travel money will be taking me to the AAPA annual meetings in Portland this year rather than the Paleo meetings, but looking over the program I will be missing some good talks and posters.

Tuesday, April 17 (talks)

10:15 Sutton, M., K. Kuman, R. Clarke, T. R. Pickering, J. Heaton and C. K. Brain
The Oldowan and Homo habilis at Swartkrans

11:30 Ferring, R., T. Shelia, M. Tappen, M. Bukhsiandze and D. Lordkipanidze
New evidence for the spatial-temporal record of occupations at Dmanisi in the Georgian Caucasus

12:00 Belmaker, M., K. Krueger, A. Henry and O. Bar-Yosef
Earliest evidence for non-dietary anterior tooth use behaviors in Homo

Wednesday, April 18 (talks)

2:15 Kuhn, S., N Balkan-Atli, K. Erturac, B. Dincer and L. Astruc
The Paleolithic settlement of Central Anatolia: recent results from Golludag

2:45 Adler, D., B. Yeritsyan, K. Wilkinson, R. Pinhasi and B. Gasparyan
Paleolithic foragers of the Hrazdan Gorge, Armenia

Tuesday, April 17, 4-6pm (posters)

Clement, A., and S. Hillson
Macro tooth wear patterns in the early hominin fossils of South Africa

Estalrrich, A., A. Rosas, R. Huguet, A. Garica-Tabernero, M. Bastir, S. Garcia-Vargas and M. de la Rasilla
Evidence for non-foraging sexual division of labor in Neandertals from the El Sidron site (Asturias, Spain)

Ferraro, J., K. Binetti, B. Richmond, D. Braun and F. Manthi
Early and Middle Pleistocene paleoanthropological discoveries in the Chalbi Basin, northern Kenya

Quinn, R., H. Roche, C. Lepre, S. Harmand, C. Feibel and J. LewisHabitat preference(s) of early Pleistocene tool users

I’m sure these are just some of the good presentations.

About Adam Van Arsdale

I am biological anthropologist with a specialization in paleoanthropology. My research focuses on the pattern of evolutionary change in humans over the past two million years, with an emphasis on the early evolution and dispersal of our genus, Homo. My work spans a number of areas including comparative anatomy, genetics and demography.
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