- area may
indicate that
Bubaline rock art was
developed by
Aterians. In the Sahara,
Aterians camped near lakes, rivers, and springs, and
engaged in the...
- re****embled—providing hunter-gatherers with semi-permanent habitation.
Aterian tool-making
reached Egypt c. 40,000 BC. The
Khormusan industry in Egypt...
-
northern Agadez Region. Some of
these finds have been
linked with the
Aterian and
Mousterian tool
cultures of the
Middle Paleolithic period,
which flourished...
- tool techniques.
Tools of this era,
starting about 30,000 BC, are
called Aterian (after the
archaeological site of Bir el Ater,
south of Tebessa). The earliest...
- as
early as ~100,000
years ago,
likely for use as tools. In the Sahara,
Aterians camped near lakes, rivers, and springs, and
engaged in the
activity of...
- 000–10,000 BC:
Inhabited by
Iberomaurusians 80,000–20,000 BC:
Inhabited by
Aterians Since 1.8
Million BC,
humans have been
settled in
Algeria as demonstrated...
-
include pre-Mousterian,
Aterian, and
Iberomaurusian lithic industries, plus an
unusual non-Levallois
industry between the
Aterian and the Iberomaurusian...
- Part of a
series on the
History of
Algeria Prehistory Aterian Culture (80,000 BC)
Iberomaurusian Culture (20,000 BC)
Capsian culture (10,000 BC) Rock...
- Pleistocene,
Middle Stone Age
peoples (e.g., Iwo
Eleru people,
possibly Aterians), who
dwelled throughout West
Africa between MIS 4 and MIS 2, were gradually...
-
weathering of
rocks in the region.
Lithic tools belonging to the
prehistoric Aterian culture of the
Maghreb have been
discovered in
Middle Paleolithic deposits...