Prof. Sahra Talamo

Prof. Sahra Talamo

Università degli Studi di Bologna

H-index: 43

Europe-Italy

About Prof. Sahra Talamo

Prof. Sahra Talamo, With an exceptional h-index of 43 and a recent h-index of 38 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Università degli Studi di Bologna, specializes in the field of Radiocarbon Dating, Calibration Curve IntCal, Paleolithic Archaeology, Paleolithic, Chronology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Stable isotopes show Homo sapiens dispersed into cold steppes~ 45,000 years ago at Ilsenhöhle in Ranis, Germany

di Firenze

The invention of writing on Rapa Nui (Easter Island). New radiocarbon dates on the Rongorongo script

Ancient DNA reveals interstadials as a main driver of the temperate common vole (Microtus arvalis) population dynamics during the Last Glacial Period

Homo sapiens reached the higher latitudes of Europe by 45,000 years ago

Stable isotopes in the shell organic matrix for (paleo) environmental reconstructions

Contrebandiers (Grotte des Contrebandiers).

Back to the future: The advantage of studying key events in human evolution using a new high resolution radiocarbon method

Prof. Sahra Talamo Information

University

Università degli Studi di Bologna

Position

"Giacomo Ciamician" Department of Chemistry CHIM-

Citations(all)

25799

Citations(since 2020)

11199

Cited By

17252

hIndex(all)

43

hIndex(since 2020)

38

i10Index(all)

101

i10Index(since 2020)

86

Email

University Profile Page

Università degli Studi di Bologna

Prof. Sahra Talamo Skills & Research Interests

Radiocarbon Dating

Calibration Curve IntCal

Paleolithic Archaeology

Paleolithic

Chronology

Top articles of Prof. Sahra Talamo

Stable isotopes show Homo sapiens dispersed into cold steppes~ 45,000 years ago at Ilsenhöhle in Ranis, Germany

Authors

Sarah Pederzani,Kate Britton,Manuel Trost,Helen Fewlass,Nicolas Bourgon,Jeremy McCormack,Klervia Jaouen,Holger Dietl,Hans-Jürgen Döhle,André Kirchner,Tobias Lauer,Mael Le Corre,Shannon P McPherron,Harald Meller,Dorothea Mylopotamitaki,Jörg Orschiedt,Hélène Rougier,Karen Ruebens,Tim Schüler,Virginie Sinet-Mathiot,Geoff M Smith,Sahra Talamo,Thomas Tütken,Frido Welker,Elena I Zavala,Marcel Weiss,Jean-Jacques Hublin

Published Date

2024/3

The spread of Homo sapiens into new habitats across Eurasia~ 45,000 years ago and the concurrent disappearance of Neanderthals represents a critical evolutionary turnover in our species’ history.‘Transitional’technocomplexes, such as the Lincombian–Ranisian–Jerzmanowician (LRJ), characterize the European record during this period but their makers and evolutionary significance have long remained unclear. New evidence from Ilsenhöhle in Ranis, Germany, now provides a secure connection of the LRJ to H. sapiens remains dated to~ 45,000 years ago, making it one of the earliest forays of our species to central Europe. Using many stable isotope records of climate produced from 16 serially sampled equid teeth spanning~ 12,500 years of LRJ and Upper Palaeolithic human occupation at Ranis, we review the ability of early humans to adapt to different climate and habitat conditions. Results show that cold …

di Firenze

Authors

SJ Crow,SG Engel,LM Schaefer,TD Brewerton,G Castellini,K Trottier,CB Peterson,SA Wonderlich

Journal

Eur Eat Disord Rev

Published Date

2021/7

Conclusions: Results suggest that a traumatic event history may hinder treatment success and that PTSD may be more influential than the trauma exposure itself.

The invention of writing on Rapa Nui (Easter Island). New radiocarbon dates on the Rongorongo script

Authors

Silvia Ferrara,Laura Tassoni,Bernd Kromer,Lukas Wacker,Michael Friedrich,Francesca Tonini,Lorenzo Lastilla,Roberta Ravanelli,Sahra Talamo

Journal

Scientific Reports

Published Date

2024/2/2

Placing the origin of an undeciphered script in time is crucial to understanding the invention of writing in human history. Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, developed a script, now engraved on fewer than 30 wooden objects, which is still undeciphered. Its origins are also obscure. Central to this issue is whether the script was invented before European travelers reached the island in the eighteenth century AD. Hence direct radiocarbon dating of the wood plays a fundamental role. Until now, only two tablets were directly dated, placing them in the nineteenth c. AD, which does not solve the question of independent invention. Here we radiocarbon-dated four Rongorongo tablets preserved in Rome, Italy. One specimen yielded a unique and secure mid-fifteenth c. date, while the others fall within the nineteenth c. AD. Our results suggest that the use of the script could be placed to a horizon that predates the arrival of …

Ancient DNA reveals interstadials as a main driver of the temperate common vole (Microtus arvalis) population dynamics during the Last Glacial Period

Authors

Mateusz Baca,Danijela Popovic,Anna Lemanik,Sandra Bañuls-Cardona,Nicholas Conard,Gloria Cuenca-Bescós,Emmanuel Desclaux,Helen Fewlass,Jesús García,Gerald Heckel,Ivan Horáček,Loïc Lebreton,Juan López-García,Elisa Luzi,Zoran Marković,Jadranka Mauch Lenardić,Xabier Murelaga,Aleksandru Petculescu,Vasil Popov,Tereza Hadravová,Sara Rhodes,Bogdan Ridush,Aurélien Royer,John Stewart,Joanna Stojak,Sahra Talamo,Monika Knul,Xuejing Wang,Jan Wójcik,Adam Nadachowski

Journal

Authorea Preprints

Published Date

2024/1/31

The common vole is a temperate rodent widespread across Europe. Phylogeographic studies of its extant populations suggested the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) as one of the main drivers of the species’ population history. However, analyses based solely on extant genetic diversity may not recover the full complexity of Late Pleistocene population dynamics. To reconstruct the population history of the common vole through the Last Glacial Period, we analysed a 4.2 kb-long fragment of mitochondrial DNA of 148 ancient and 51 modern specimens, sampled from across Europe, and covering the last 60 thousand years (ka). We estimate the time to the most recent common ancestor of Last Glacial common vole lineages to 90 ka ago and the diversification of the main extant lineages to between 55 and 40 ka ago, substantially earlier than previously estimated. Our data suggests multiple lineage turnovers in Europe at the end of Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 and around the Pleistocene/Holocene transition. Conversely, data from the Western Carpathians suggest continuity throughout the LGM. This further suggests that climate amelioration during MIS 2 had little impact on common voles and that the main driver of population dynamics was the reduction of open habitats during the interstadial periods.

Homo sapiens reached the higher latitudes of Europe by 45,000 years ago

Authors

Dorothea Mylopotamitaki,Marcel Weiss,Helen Fewlass,Elena Irene Zavala,Hélène Rougier,Arev Pelin Sümer,Mateja Hajdinjak,Geoff M Smith,Karen Ruebens,Virginie Sinet-Mathiot,Sarah Pederzani,Elena Essel,Florian S Harking,Huan Xia,Jakob Hansen,André Kirchner,Tobias Lauer,Mareike Stahlschmidt,Michael Hein,Sahra Talamo,Lukas Wacker,Harald Meller,Holger Dietl,Jörg Orschiedt,Jesper V Olsen,Hugo Zeberg,Kay Prüfer,Johannes Krause,Matthias Meyer,Frido Welker,Shannon P McPherron,Tim Schüler,Jean-Jacques Hublin

Journal

Nature

Published Date

2024/1/31

The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Europe is associated with the regional disappearance of Neanderthals and the spread of Homo sapiens. Late Neanderthals persisted in western Europe several millennia after the occurrence of H. sapiens in eastern Europe1. Local hybridization between the two groups occurred2, but not on all occasions3. Archaeological evidence also indicates the presence of several technocomplexes during this transition, complicating our understanding and the association of behavioural adaptations with specific hominin groups4. One such technocomplex for which the makers are unknown is the Lincombian–Ranisian–Jerzmanowician (LRJ), which has been described in northwestern and central Europe5–8. Here we present the morphological and proteomic taxonomic identification, mitochondrial DNA analysis and direct radiocarbon dating of human remains directly associated …

Stable isotopes in the shell organic matrix for (paleo) environmental reconstructions

Authors

Dragana Paleček,Stefania Milano,Igor Gutiérrez-Zugasti,Sahra Talamo

Journal

Communications Chemistry

Published Date

2024/1/18

Stable isotope ratios of mollusc shell carbonates have long been used to reconstruct past environmental conditions. Although shells also contain organics, they are seldom used in (paleo)climatic studies. Here, we extract the acid-soluble and insoluble fractions of the organic matrix of modern Mytilus galloprovincialis shells from three sites along a coast–to-upper-estuary environmental gradient to measure their hydrogen (δ2H) and oxygen (δ18O) isotope compositions. Both organic fractions showed isotopic signatures significantly different from those of carbonate and water at each site, indicating the involvement of different fractionation mechanisms. The soluble fraction showed gradual differences in isotope values along the gradient, while the insoluble fraction showed δ2H-δ18O correlation regressions subparallel to the Global and Local Meteoric Water Lines. These results showed the great potential of the shell …

Contrebandiers (Grotte des Contrebandiers).

Authors

D Olszewski,A Aldeias,E Álvarez-Fernández,BAB Blackwell,M El Hajraouih,EY Hallett,Z Jacobs,Zeljko Rezek,D Richter,AR Skinner,TE Steele,S Talamo

Published Date

2023/6/19

“Contrebandiers (Grotte des Contrebandiers).” - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu Documentation FR Français (FR) Anglais (EN) Se connecter HAL science ouverte Recherche Loading... Recherche avancée Information de documents Titres Titres Sous-titre Titre de l'ouvrage Titre du volume (Série) Champ de recherche par défaut (multicritères) + texte intégral des PDF Résumé Texte intégral indexé des documents PDF Mots-clés Type de document Sous-type de document Tous les identifiants du document Identifiant HAL du dépôt Langue du document (texte) Pays (Texte) Ville À paraître (true ou false) Ajouter Auteur Auteur (multicritères) Auteur (multicritères) Auteur : Nom complet Auteur : Nom de famille Auteur : Prénom Auteur : Complément de nom, deuxième prénom Auteur : Organisme payeur Auteur : IdHal (chaîne de caractères) Auteur : Fonction Auteur : personID (entier) hal_authId_i …

Back to the future: The advantage of studying key events in human evolution using a new high resolution radiocarbon method

Authors

Sahra Talamo,Bernd Kromer,Michael P Richards,Lukas Wacker

Published Date

2023/2/15

Radiocarbon dating is the most widely applied dating method in archaeology, especially in human evolution studies, where it is used to determine the chronology of key events, such as the replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans in Europe. However, the method does not always provide precise and accurate enough ages to understand the important processes of human evolution. Here we review the newest method developments in radiocarbon dating (‘Radiocarbon 3.0’), which can lead us to much better chronologies and understanding of the major events in recent human evolution. As an example, we apply these new methods to discuss the dating of the important Palaeolithic site of Bacho Kiro (Bulgaria).

DataSheet1_A new assemblage of late Neanderthal remains from Cova Simanya (NE Iberia). docx

Authors

Juan I Morales,Artur Cebriá,María Soto,Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo,Raquel Hernando,Elena Moreno-Ribas,Diego Lombao,José R Rabuñal,David Manuel Martín-Perea,Antonio García-Tabernero,Ethel Allué,Andrea García-Basanta,Esther Lizano,Tomàs Marqués-Bonet,Sahra Talamo,Laura Tassoni,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Josep M Fullola,Antonio Rosas

Published Date

2023/9/19

This study presents an exceptional collection of 54 Late Pleistocene human remains that correspond to at least three Neanderthal individuals from Simanya Gran, the main gallery of Cova Simanya, located in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula. The collection comprised 53 unpublished remains that were unearthed during the 1970s and an additional tooth discovered during 2021 excavations. The specimens represent an adult with a small stature, a periadolescent aged approximately 11.5 years, and an immature individual aged approximately 7.7 years, thus offering a more complete demographic perspective. The collection encompasses diverse anatomical parts including upper and lower dentition, mandible, vertebrae, and limb bones from both the upper and lower extremities. Attempts to extract aDNA were unsuccessful. Renewed archaeological investigations at Cova Simanya have facilitated the reevaluation of the original stratigraphic context of these remains, leading to the discovery of the additional tooth, aligning with the periadolescent individual. This assemblage is currently the most extensive Neanderthal collection from the northeastern Mediterranean Iberia, offering invaluable insights into the morphology and evolutionary trajectory of Late Pleistocene hominins. Hence, Simanya Neanderthals will enhance our understanding of Neanderthal demographics and evolution, paving the way for an in-depth examination of the morphological diversity and evolutionary context of Iberian Neanderthals.

Symbolic innovation at the onset of the Upper Paleolithic in Eurasia shown by the personal ornaments from Tolbor-21 (Mongolia)

Authors

Solange Rigaud,Evgeny P Rybin,Arina M Khatsenovich,Alain Queffelec,Clea H Paine,Byambaa Gunchinsuren,Sahra Talamo,Daria V Marchenko,Tsedendorj Bolorbat,Davaakhuu Odsuren,J Christopher Gillam,Masami Izuho,Alexander Yu Fedorchenko,Dashdorjgochoo Odgerel,Roman Shelepaev,Jean-Jacques Hublin,Nicolas Zwyns

Journal

Scientific reports

Published Date

2023/6/12

Figurative depictions in art first occur ca. 50,000 years ago in Europe, Africa, and Southeast Asia. Considered by most as an advanced form of symbolic behavior, they are restricted to our species. Here, we report a piece of ornament interpreted as a phallus-like representation. It was found in a 42,000 ca.-year-old Upper Paleolithic archaeological layer at the open-air archaeological site of Tolbor-21, in Mongolia. Mineralogical, microscopic, and rugosimetric analyses points toward the allochthonous origin of the pendant and a complex functional history. Three-dimensional phallic pendants are unknown in the Paleolithic record, and this discovery predates the earliest known sexed anthropomorphic representation. It attests that hunter-gatherer communities used sex anatomical attributes as symbols at a very early stage of their dispersal in the region. The pendant was produced during a period that overlaps with age …

Author Correction: Palaeogenomics of Upper Palaeolithic to Neolithic European hunter-gatherers (Nature,(2023), 615, 7950,(117-126), 10.1038/s41586-023-05726-0)

Authors

Cosimo Posth,He Yu,Ayshin Ghalichi,Hélène Rougier,Isabelle Crevecoeur,Yilei Huang,Harald Ringbauer,Adam B Rohrlach,Kathrin Nägele,Vanessa Villalba-Mouco,Rita Radzeviciute,Tiago Ferraz,Alexander Stoessel,Rezeda Tukhbatova,Dorothée G Drucker,Martina Lari,Alessandra Modi,Stefania Vai,Tina Saupe,Christiana L Scheib,Giulio Catalano,Luca Pagani,Sahra Talamo,Helen Fewlass,Laurent Klaric,André Morala,Mathieu Rué,Stéphane Madelaine,Laurent Crépin,Jean-Baptiste Caverne,Emmy Bocaege,Stefano Ricci,Francesco Boschin,Priscilla Bayle,Bruno Maureille,Le Brun-Ricalens,Jean-Guillaume Bordes,Gregorio Oxilia,Eugenio Bortolini,Olivier Bignon-Lau,Grégory Debout,Michel Orliac,Antoine Zazzo,Vitale Sparacello,Elisabetta Starnini,Luca Sineo,Johannes van der Plicht,Laure Pecqueur,Gildas Merceron,Géraldine Garcia,Jean-Michel Leuvrey,Coralie Bay Garcia,Asier Gómez-Olivencia,Marta Połtowicz-Bobak,Dariusz Bobak,Mona Le Luyer,Paul Storm,Claudia Hoffmann,Jacek Kabaciński,Tatiana Filimonova,Svetlana Shnaider,Natalia Berezina,Borja González-Rabanal,Manuel R González Morales,Ana B Marín-Arroyo,Belén López,Carmen Alonso-Llamazares,Annamaria Ronchitelli,Caroline Polet,Ivan Jadin,Nicolas Cauwe,Joaquim Soler,Neus Coromina,Isaac Rufí,Richard Cottiaux,Geoffrey Clark,Lawrence G Straus,Marie-Anne Julien,Silvia Renhart,Dorothea Talaa,Stefano Benazzi,Matteo Romandini,Luc Amkreutz,Hervé Bocherens,Christoph Wißing,Sébastien Villotte,Javier Fernández-López de Pablo,Magdalena Gómez-Puche,Marco Aurelio Esquembre-Bebia,Pierre Bodu,Liesbeth Smits,Bénédicte Souffi,Rimantas Jankauskas,Justina Kozakaitė,Christophe Cupillard,Hartmut Benthien,Kurt Wehrberger,Ralf W Schmitz,Susanne C Feine,Tim Schüler,Corinne Thevenet,Dan Grigorescu,Friedrich Lüth,Andreas Kotula,Henny Piezonka,Franz Schopper,Jiří Svoboda,Sandra Sázelová,Andrey Chizhevsky,Aleksandr Khokhlov,Nicholas J Conard,Frédérique Valentin,Katerina Harvati,Patrick Semal,Bettina Jungklaus,Alexander Suvorov,Rick Schulting,Vyacheslav Moiseyev,Kristiina Mannermaa,Alexandra Buzhilova,Thomas Terberger,David Caramelli,Eveline Altena,Wolfgang Haak,Johannes Krause

Journal

Nature: the international journal of science

Published Date

2023

In the version of this article initially published, the affiliation listed for David Caramelli was incorrect (Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Russia). The affiliation has been corrected to the Department of Biology, University of Florence, Florence, Italy in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.

A new assemblage of late Neanderthal remains from Cova Simanya (NE Iberia)

Authors

Juan I Morales,Artur Cebrià,María Soto,Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo,Raquel Hernando,Elena Moreno-Ribas,Diego Lombao,José R Rabuñal,David M Martín-Perea,Antonio García-Tabernero,Ethel Allué,Andrea García-Basanta,Esther Lizano,Tomàs Marquès-Bonet,Sahra Talamo,Laura Tassoni,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Josep M Fullola,Antonio Rosas

Journal

Frontiers in Earth Science

Published Date

2023/9/19

This study presents an exceptional collection of 54 Late Pleistocene human remains that correspond to at least three Neanderthal individuals from Simanya Gran, the main gallery of Cova Simanya, located in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula. The collection comprised 53 unpublished remains that were unearthed during the 1970s and an additional tooth discovered during 2021 excavations. The specimens represent an adult with a small stature, a periadolescent aged approximately 11.5 years, and an immature individual aged approximately 7.7 years, thus offering a more complete demographic perspective. The collection encompasses diverse anatomical parts including upper and lower dentition, mandible, vertebrae, and limb bones from both the upper and lower extremities. Attempts to extract aDNA were unsuccessful. Renewed archaeological investigations at Cova Simanya have facilitated the reevaluation of the original stratigraphic context of these remains, leading to the discovery of the additional tooth, aligning with the periadolescent individual. This assemblage is currently the most extensive Neanderthal collection from the northeastern Mediterranean Iberia, offering invaluable insights into the morphology and evolutionary trajectory of Late Pleistocene hominins. Hence, Simanya Neanderthals will enhance our understanding of Neanderthal demographics and evolution, paving the way for an in-depth examination of the morphological diversity and evolutionary context of Iberian Neanderthals.

A Third Neanderthal Individual from La Ferrassie Dated to the End of the Middle Palaeolithic

Authors

Guillaume Guérin,Vera Aldeias,Frederik Baumgarten,Paul Goldberg,Asier Gómez-Olivencia,Christelle Lahaye,Stéphane Madelaine,Bruno Maureille,Anne Philippe,Dennis Sandgathe,Sahra Talamo,Kristina Thomsen,Alain Turq,Antoine Balzeau

Journal

Paleoanthropology

Published Date

2023

The Palaeolithic site of La Ferrassie (SW France) has been extensively studied since its discovery during the 19th century. In addition to a large sequence including Middle and Upper Paleolithic layers, the site has yielded two very complete adult Neanderthal skeletons, five partial immature Neanderthal skeletons as well as a few isolated human remains. Currently, much of the site sequence has been dated by radiocarbon and OSL but the dating of the human skeletal remains is still a matter of debate. Here, we present the OSL dating of a still consolidated sediment sample associated with the Neanderthal skeleton La Ferrassie 1 (LF1), unearthed by Peyrony and Capitan in 1909 and preserved at the Musée de l’Homme (Paris, France). This block of sediment is crucial as it constitutes the first possibility to date a sample in close association with the specimen. This sample is included in a chronological model at the scale of the site, with the aim to estimate the ages of three Neanderthal individuals: La Ferrassie 1, 2 and 8 (LF1, LF2 and LF8). Two chronological modelling tools (OxCal and BayLum/ArchaeoPhases) are first applied to previously published radiocarbon ages and compared. Chronological inferences show that the BayLum/ArchaeoPhases model provides posterior probability densities, or statistical inferences, that are more consistent with the measured data. When including OSL ages in the BayLum model, we can conclude that all three studied individuals date from the late Middle Palaeolithic (<52 ka at the 95% credibility level) and could have been contemporaries in the range 44.9 to 44.1 ka.

Imputed genomes and haplotype-based analyses of the Picts of early medieval Scotland reveal fine-scale relatedness between Iron Age, early medieval and the modern people of the UK

Authors

Adeline Morez,Kate Britton,Gordon Noble,Torsten Günther,Anders Götherström,Ricardo Rodríguez-Varela,Natalija Kashuba,Rui Martiniano,Sahra Talamo,Nicholas J Evans,Joel D Irish,Christina Donald,Linus Girdland-Flink

Journal

PLoS Genetics

Published Date

2023/4/27

There are longstanding questions about the origins and ancestry of the Picts of early medieval Scotland (ca. 300–900 CE), prompted in part by exotic medieval origin myths, their enigmatic symbols and inscriptions, and the meagre textual evidence. The Picts, first mentioned in the late 3rd century CE resisted the Romans and went on to form a powerful kingdom that ruled over a large territory in northern Britain. In the 9th and 10th centuries Gaelic language, culture and identity became dominant, transforming the Pictish realm into Alba, the precursor to the medieval kingdom of Scotland. To date, no comprehensive analysis of Pictish genomes has been published, and questions about their biological relationships to other cultural groups living in Britain remain unanswered. Here we present two high-quality Pictish genomes (2.4 and 16.5X coverage) from central and northern Scotland dated from the 5th-7th century which we impute and co-analyse with >8,300 previously published ancient and modern genomes. Using allele frequency and haplotype-based approaches, we can firmly place the genomes within the Iron Age gene pool in Britain and demonstrate regional biological affinity. We also demonstrate the presence of population structure within Pictish groups, with Orcadian Picts being genetically distinct from their mainland contemporaries. When investigating Identity-By-Descent (IBD) with present-day genomes, we observe broad affinities between the mainland Pictish genomes and the present-day people living in western Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and Northumbria, but less with the rest of England, the Orkney islands and eastern …

Ancient DNA reveals interstadials as a driver of common vole population dynamics during the last glacial period

Authors

Mateusz Baca,Danijela Popović,Anna Lemanik,Sandra Bañuls‐Cardona,Nicholas J Conard,Gloria Cuenca‐Bescós,Emmanuel Desclaux,Helen Fewlass,Jesus T Garcia,Tereza Hadravova,Gerald Heckel,Ivan Horáček,Monika Vlasta Knul,Loïc Lebreton,Juan Manuel López‐García,Elisa Luzi,Zoran Marković,Jadranka Mauch Lenardić,Xabier Murelaga,Pierre Noiret,Alexandru Petculescu,Vasil Popov,Sara E Rhodes,Bogdan Ridush,Aurélien Royer,John R Stewart,Joanna Stojak,Sahra Talamo,Xuejing Wang,Jan M Wójcik,Adam Nadachowski

Journal

Journal of biogeography

Published Date

2023/1

Aim Many species experienced population turnover and local extinction during the Late Pleistocene. In the case of megafauna, it remains challenging to disentangle climate change and the activities of Palaeolithic hunter‐gatherers as the main cause. In contrast, the impact of humans on rodent populations is likely to be negligible. This study investigated which climatic and/or environmental factors affect the population dynamics of the common vole. This temperate rodent is widespread across Europe and was one of the most abundant small mammal species throughout the Late Pleistocene. Location Europe. Taxon Common vole (Microtus arvalis). Methods We generated a dataset comprised of 4.2 kb long fragment of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from 148 ancient and 51 modern specimens sampled from multiple localities across Europe and covering the last 60 thousand years (ka). We used Bayesian …

The ornaments of the Arma Veirana early Mesolithic infant burial

Authors

C Gravel-Miguel,E Cristiani,J Hodgkins,CM Orr,DS Strait,M Peresani,Stefano Benazzi,G Pothier-Bouchard,HM Keller,D Meyer,D Drohobytsky,Sahra Talamo,D Panetta,Andrea Zupancich,CE Miller,F Negrino,J Riel-Salvatore

Journal

Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory

Published Date

2023/9

Personal ornaments are widely viewed as indicators of social identity and personhood. Ornaments are ubiquitous from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene, but they are most often found as isolated objects within archaeological assemblages without direct evidence on how they were displayed. This article presents a detailed record of the ornaments found in direct association with an Early Mesolithic buried female infant discovered in 2017 at the site of Arma Veirana (Liguria, Italy). It uses microscopic, 3D, and positional analyses of the ornaments as well as a preliminary perforation experiment to document how they were perforated, used, and what led to their deposit as part of the infant’s grave goods. This study provides important information on the use of beads in the Early Mesolithic, in general, as well as the relationship between beads and young subadults, in particular. The results of the study suggest that the …

Near-infrared hyperspectral imaging to map collagen content in prehistoric bones for radiocarbon dating

Authors

Cristina Malegori,Giorgia Sciutto,Paolo Oliveri,Silvia Prati,Lucrezia Gatti,Emilio Catelli,Stefano Benazzi,Silvia Cercatillo,Dragana Paleček,Rocco Mazzeo,Sahra Talamo

Journal

Communications Chemistry

Published Date

2023/4/11

Many of the rarest prehistoric bones found by archaeologists are enormously precious and are considered to be part of our cultural and historical patrimony. Radiocarbon dating is a well-established technique that estimates the ages of bones by analysing the collagen still present. However, this method is destructive, and its use must be limited. In this study, we used imaging technology to quantify the presence of collagen in bone samples in a non-destructive way to select the most suitable samples (or sample regions) to be submitted to radiocarbon dating analysis. Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR) that was connected to a camera with hyperspectral imaging (HSI) was used along with a chemometric model to create chemical images of the distribution of collagen in ancient bones. This model quantifies the collagen at every pixel and thus provides a chemical mapping of collagen content. Our results will offer …

Contrebandiers (Grotte des Contrebandiers), Morocco

Authors

Deborah I Olszewski,Vera Aldeias,Esteban Álvarez-Fernández,Bonnie AB Blackwell,Mohamed A El Hajraoui,Emily Y Hallett,Zenobia Jacobs,Zeljko Rezek,Daniel Richter,Anne R Skinner,Teresa E Steele,Sahra Talamo

Published Date

2023/8/18

Grotte des Contrebandiers (Smugglers’ Cave) is one of several archaeology-bearing coastal caves in the Rabat-Temara region of Morocco. It lies c. 17 km south of Rabat and 250 m from the current Atlantic coastline. Archaeological work along the Atlantic littoral of Morocco began in the late 1930s. In 1956, J. Roche discovered Contrebandiers Cave where he excavated until 1976. In 2005, within the framework of a collaboration between the Institut National des Sciences de l’Archéologie et du Patrimoine (INSAP) and the University of Pennsylvania, M. A. El Hajraoui and the late H. L. Dibble directed new excavations of the cave. Contrebandiers contains Middle (upper layers with tanged pieces and lower layers without tanged pieces) and Later (Iberomaursian) Stone Age deposits, with lithic artifacts, vertebrate fauna (including bone tools), mollusks (including shell ornaments), and evidence for fire use. Extensive …

A 23,000-year-old southern Iberian individual links human groups that lived in Western Europe before and after the Last Glacial Maximum

Authors

Vanessa Villalba-Mouco,Marieke S van de Loosdrecht,Adam B Rohrlach,Helen Fewlass,Sahra Talamo,He Yu,Franziska Aron,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Lidia Cabello,Pedro Cantalejo Duarte,José Ramos-Muñoz,Cosimo Posth,Johannes Krause,Gerd-Christian Weniger,Wolfgang Haak

Journal

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Published Date

2023/4

Human populations underwent range contractions during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) which had lasting and dramatic effects on their genetic variation. The genetic ancestry of individuals associated with the post-LGM Magdalenian technocomplex has been interpreted as being derived from groups associated with the pre-LGM Aurignacian. However, both these ancestries differ from that of central European individuals associated with the chronologically intermediate Gravettian. Thus, the genomic transition from pre- to post-LGM remains unclear also in western Europe, where we lack genomic data associated with the intermediate Solutrean, which spans the height of the LGM. Here we present genome-wide data from sites in Andalusia in southern Spain, including from a Solutrean-associated individual from Cueva del Malalmuerzo, directly dated to ~23,000 cal yr bp. The Malalmuerzo individual carried …

Genomic history of coastal societies from eastern South America

Authors

Tiago Ferraz,Ximena Suarez Villagran,Kathrin Nägele,Rita Radzevičiūtė,Renan Barbosa Lemes,Domingo C Salazar-García,Verônica Wesolowski,Marcony Lopes Alves,Murilo Bastos,Anne Rapp Py-Daniel,Helena Pinto Lima,Jéssica Mendes Cardoso,Renata Estevam,Andersen Liryo,Geovan M Guimarães,Levy Figuti,Sabine Eggers,Cláudia R Plens,Dionne Miranda Azevedo Erler,Henrique Antônio Valadares Costa,Igor da Silva Erler,Edward Koole,Gilmar Henriques,Ana Solari,Gabriela Martin,Sérgio Francisco Serafim Monteiro da Silva,Renato Kipnis,Letícia Morgana Müller,Mariane Ferreira,Janine Carvalho Resende,Eliane Chim,Carlos Augusto da Silva,Ana Claudia Borella,Tiago Tomé,Lisiane Müller Plumm Gomes,Diego Barros Fonseca,Cassia Santos da Rosa,João Darcy de Moura Saldanha,Lúcio Costa Leite,Claudia MS Cunha,Sibeli Aparecida Viana,Fernando Ozorio Almeida,Daniela Klokler,Henry Luydy Abraham Fernandes,Sahra Talamo,Paulo DeBlasis,Sheila Mendonça de Souza,Claide de Paula Moraes,Rodrigo Elias Oliveira,Tábita Hünemeier,André Strauss,Cosimo Posth

Journal

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Published Date

2023/8

Sambaqui (shellmound) societies are among the most intriguing archaeological phenomena in pre-colonial South America, extending from approximately 8,000 to 1,000 years before present (yr bp) across 3,000 km on the Atlantic coast. However, little is known about their connection to early Holocene hunter-gatherers, how this may have contributed to different historical pathways and the processes through which late Holocene ceramists came to rule the coast shortly before European contact. To contribute to our understanding of the population history of indigenous societies on the eastern coast of South America, we produced genome-wide data from 34 ancient individuals as early as 10,000 yr bp from four different regions in Brazil. Early Holocene hunter-gatherers were found to lack shared genetic drift among themselves and with later populations from eastern South America, suggesting that they derived from …

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Prof. Sahra Talamo FAQs

What is Prof. Sahra Talamo's h-index at Università degli Studi di Bologna?

The h-index of Prof. Sahra Talamo has been 38 since 2020 and 43 in total.

What are Prof. Sahra Talamo's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Stable isotopes show Homo sapiens dispersed into cold steppes~ 45,000 years ago at Ilsenhöhle in Ranis, Germany

di Firenze

The invention of writing on Rapa Nui (Easter Island). New radiocarbon dates on the Rongorongo script

Ancient DNA reveals interstadials as a main driver of the temperate common vole (Microtus arvalis) population dynamics during the Last Glacial Period

Homo sapiens reached the higher latitudes of Europe by 45,000 years ago

Stable isotopes in the shell organic matrix for (paleo) environmental reconstructions

Contrebandiers (Grotte des Contrebandiers).

Back to the future: The advantage of studying key events in human evolution using a new high resolution radiocarbon method

...

are the top articles of Prof. Sahra Talamo at Università degli Studi di Bologna.

What are Prof. Sahra Talamo's research interests?

The research interests of Prof. Sahra Talamo are: Radiocarbon Dating, Calibration Curve IntCal, Paleolithic Archaeology, Paleolithic, Chronology

What is Prof. Sahra Talamo's total number of citations?

Prof. Sahra Talamo has 25,799 citations in total.

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