The Nile Corridor and the Out‐of‐Africa Model An Examination of the Archaeological Record
Philip Van Peer1,2
1PHILIP VAN PEER is Professor of Archaeology at the Catholic University of Leuven (B‐3000 Leuven, Belgium). Born in 1958, he received his Ph.D. from the Catholic University in 1988 and was a postdoctoral researcher with the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research from 1988 to 1996. His research interests include the lithic technology of the Middle Palaeolithic and the methodological aspects of archaeological analysis. Among his publications are "Interassemblage Variability and Levallois Styles: The Case of the Northern African Middle Palaeolithic" (Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 10:107–51), The Levallois Reduction Strategy (Madison: Prehistory Press, 1992), and, with P. M. Vermeersch, "Middle to Upper Palaeolithic Transition: The Evidence for the Nile Valley," in The Emergence of Modern Humans: An Archaeological Perspective, edited by P. Mellars (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1990). The present paper was submitted 31 VII 97 and accepted 21 × 97
2the final version reached the Editor's office 5 XI 97.
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Current Anthropology
Tập 39 Số S1
S115-S140
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