Stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and chronostratigraphic background of the Mira succession (Zaporozhiye, Central Ukraine), Midway between Carpathians and Don

p. 187-213

Abstract

Located along the Dnieper, south of Dniepropetrovsk, the Mira site shows a thick succession of fluviatile sands capped by loess-like deposits. It included two cultural layers dated between 27.8 and 26.6 ka BP, preserved in a 55 cm thick fine alluvial deposit interbedded in the sands. Data on palaeopedology and palynology point to rather cool and dry conditions during a final phase of the Middle Pleniglacial, with meadow vegetation along the river banks and steppe vegetation on plateau. The upper cultural layer with abundant faunal remains and lithics included an archaic industry combining both Middle and Upper Palaeolithic features, and contained a remain of anatomically modern human. The lower cultural layer included a more advanced industry of Upper Palaeolithic appearance. With regard to its geographical position between Kostienki on the Don and the Carpathians, the Mira site provides new insight on the diversity of the Early Upper Palaeolithic at the end of the Middle Pleniglacial in the Russian Plain.

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References

Bibliographical reference

Paul Haesaerts, Freddy Damblon, Natalia P. Gerasimenko, Vadim N. Stepanchuk, Vadim Y. Cohen and N. N. Kovalyukh, « Stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and chronostratigraphic background of the Mira succession (Zaporozhiye, Central Ukraine), Midway between Carpathians and Don », ERAUL, 140 | 2014, 187-213.

Electronic reference

Paul Haesaerts, Freddy Damblon, Natalia P. Gerasimenko, Vadim N. Stepanchuk, Vadim Y. Cohen and N. N. Kovalyukh, « Stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and chronostratigraphic background of the Mira succession (Zaporozhiye, Central Ukraine), Midway between Carpathians and Don », ERAUL [Online], 140 | 2014, Online since 20 November 2024, connection on 10 January 2025. URL : http://popups.lib.uliege.be/3041-5527/index.php?id=219

Authors

Paul Haesaerts

Royal Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium

By this author

Freddy Damblon

Royal Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium

By this author

Natalia P. Gerasimenko

Taras Shevchenko National University Kiev, Department of Botany, Kiev, Ukraine

Vadim N. Stepanchuk

Institute of Archaeology, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Kiev, Ukraine

Vadim Y. Cohen

Institute of Archaeology, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Kiev, Ukraine

N. N. Kovalyukh