European Society for the Study of Human Evolution 3Rd Annual Meeting, 19-21 September, 2013 Vienna, Austria
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European Society for the study of Human Evolution 3rd Annual Meeting, 19-21 September, 2013 Vienna, Austria Thursday, 19 September 17:00-19:00 Registration University of Vienna, Oktogon Keynote: Professor Tecumseh Fitch University of Vienna, Groβer Festsaal 19:00-20:30 The Evolution of Language: The Comparative Approach W. Tecumseh Fitch is Professor of Evolutionary Cognitive Biology at the University of Vienna. He studies the evolution of cognition and communication in animals and man, focusing on the evolution of speech, music and language. He is interested in all aspects of pattern recognition and vocal communication in vertebrates. Fitch was born in Boston, USA and after obtaining his Bachelors in biology (1985) he did his PhD in Cognitive and Linguistic Science (1994), both at Brown University. After a post-doc in Speech & Hearing Sciences at MIT/Harvard, Fitch was a lecturer at Harvard from 1999-2002, first in Biology and then Psychology. From 2003 - 2008 he taught at the University of St Andrews in Scotland (Reader, School of Psychology). In 2009 he moved to a permanent professorship in Vienna, where he co- founded the new Department of Cognitive Biology in the Faculty of Life Sciences. He is the recipient of an ERC Advanced Grant, and is a co-author of over 100 publications and one patent. Fitch served as a Leibniz Professor (Leipzig University), and has been a visiting scholar at the European Institute for Advanced Studies (Wissenschaftkolleg Berlin: animal vocalization), the US National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD: brain-imaging), University of Victoria (Advanced Systems group: sonification), and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (Leipzig: evolutionary genetics). Friday, 20 September 7:00-8:00 Registration Oktogon 8:00-8:15 Opening Speech: Jean-Jacques Hublin Groβer Festsaal Session 1- Groβer Festsaal Stone tool use by wild monkeys: primate archaeological case studies from Thailand and Brazil 8:20 Michael Haslam Searching for stone tools older than 2.6 Ma: how do we know what we are looking for? 8:40 Sonia Harmand et al. Origins of aquatic resource use in East Africa and the implications for breadth of hominin dietary 9:00 versatility at 2mya Will Archer and David Braun Australopithecus sediba and the earliest origins of the genus Homo 9:20 Peter Schmid and Lee Berger Did Homo erectus consume a Pelorovis herd at BK (Bed II, Olduvai Gorge)? 9:40 Manuel Dominguez-Rodrigo et al. 10:00-10:30 Coffee Break Session 2- Groβer Festsaal Earliest Human Occupation of North Africa: New Evidence from Ain Boucherit Early Pleistocene 10:30 Deposits, Algeria Mohamed Sahnouni et al. Early Acheulian stone assemblages ~1.7-1.6 million years ago from Gona, Afar, Ethiopia 10:50 Sileshi Semaw et al. Insights about the effect of X-ray imaging on recent fossils: facts, deductions, speculations and 11:10 phantasms Paul Tafforeau et al. Paleoepigenetics: Reconstructing the DNA methylation maps of archaic hominins 11:30 David Gokhman et al. (presented by Liran Carmel) Morphological integration of the bony labyrinth and the cranial base in modern humans and 11:50 Neandertals Philipp Gunz et al. New Discovery of Middle Pleistocene Hominin fossils from the cave site “Sunjiadong” at Luanchuan 12:10 County of Henan Province in Central China Lingxia Zhao and Lizhao Zhang 12:30-14:00 Lunch Break Session 3- Groβer Festsaal Session 4- Kleiner Festsaal Adaptation to bipedalism from Ardipithecus to The signature of a modern human exit out of Homo erectus. What did genes ? What did Africa?: Middle Palaeolithic occupation in the Thar gravity ? The evolutionary relevance of the 14:00 Desert during the Upper Pleistocene hidden link between both James Blinkhorn Christine Tardieu et al. Development, integration, and modularity of New data on the radiocarbon chronology of the the pelvis: implications for fossil hominin Stretleskayan at Kostenki (Voronezh, Central 14:20 evolution Russia) Kristi L. Lewton Paul Haesaerts et al. Continuities and discontinuities in the East Paranthropus boisei – generalist or European Early Upper Palaeolithic: the Kostenki specialists? 14:40 model Gabriele Macho Andrey Sinitsyn Reading function from long bones: Innovative and traditional aspects of the Uluzzian implications for the reconstruction of early technology at Fumane cave 15:00 hominin postural and locomotor behaviours Marco Peresani et al. Laurent Puymerail and Paul O’Higgins Second maxillary molars confirm a Direct radiocarbon dating of the earliest Upper dimorphism of Australopithecus at Palaeolithic ornaments in Europe and the Levant 15:20 Sterkfontein Member 4 Katerina Douka et al. Cinzia Fornai et al. 15:40-16:00 Coffee Break Session 5- Groβer Festsaal Session 6- Kleiner Festsaal Specialized Thematic Session: Formal cognitive models in Palaeolithic archaeology La Cotte de St Brelade (Jersey): Re-evaluating The Expert Cognition Model in Human Neanderthal subsistence behaviour and Evolutionary Studies 16:00 landscape use Thomas Wynn et al. Geoff M. Smith Interacting Cognitive Subsystems: a theoretical Omnivorous Neanderthals: New perspectives mental architecture for interpreting evidence in the on diet and environmental knowledge from the archaeological record concerning cognitive 16:20 Middle Palaeolithic evolution Karen Hardy Philip Barnard et al. The Plants in the Every Day Life of Homo The origins of Me: Material engagement and the Sapiens Sapiens from Kostenki Region of the making of the self-conscious species 16:40 Russian Plain Lambros Malafouris Galina Levkovskaya et al. Evidence of processing and consumption of The Neuropsychology of Numbers and the starch-rich underground storage organs at Paleolithic Record 17:00 Dolní Věstonice II (Czech Republic) Karenleigh A. Overmann Alexander Pryor et al. Art without Symbolic Thinking: The Embodied The earliest fishhook tradition in Europe Origins of Visual Artistic Expression 17:20 Robert Sommer et al. Manuel Martín-Loeches "Fur and feathers / tooth and claw" – Deciphering Patterns in the Archaeology of South Magdalenian exploitation of small game and Africa: The Neurovisual Resonance Theory 17:40 birds at Gönnersdorf und Andernach Derek Hodgson Elaine Turner and Martin Street 18:00-20:00 Poster Session 1: Open Bar Poster Session 1: Friday 18:00-20:00 Authors of odd-numbered posters (1, 3, etc.) are expected to be present for the first hour (18:00-19:00). Authors of even-numbered posters (2,4, etc.) are expected to be present for the second hour (19:00- 20:00). Authors may use the additional hour to visit other posters. Room A Signals in the Skull: Quantifying and mapping phylogenetic signal in the cranium of strepsirrhine 1 primates Gemma Price et al. Biomechanical aspects of facial ontogeny in Macaca fascicularis as revealed by Finite Element 2 modelling Ekaterina Bulygina (Stansfield) et al. Patterns of craniofacial pneumatisation: the consequence of skull shape and functional loading? 3 Laura Fitton et al. Cranial base variations in extant Hominoidea and fossil Hominins 4 Antonio Profico et al. Cranial form and masticatory biomechanics: finite element simulations of biting among normal and 5 artificially deformed modern humans Viviana Toro Ibacache et al. Morphological integration of upper and lower jaws in extant hominids 6 Stefanie Stelzer et al. The degree of glabella and supraorbital ridge expression – the meaning for phylogenetic study 7 Wioletta Nowaczewska and Łukasz Kuźmiński How Thick-Headed Are We? Differences between Robust and Gracile Cranial Vault Thickness of 8 Modern Humans Frances Rivera 3D reconstructions from standard digital photographs of human crania 9 David Katz and Martin Friess Diet-related variation in global human cranial shape 10 Marlijn Lisanne Noback and Katerina Harvati Sex and diet in fossil hominins: Is sexual dimorphism in cranial form associated with sexual 11 dimorphism of masticatory function? Miguel Prôa et al. Sex Determination of Human Skeletal Remains Using Next Generation Sequencing Technology 12 Eppie R. Jones et al. Digit ratio, physical strength and facial shape: A lesson from ontogeny 13 Katrin Schaefer et al. New hominin remains from the Nachukui Formation, West Turkana, Kenya (West Turkana 14 Archaeological Project) Sandrine Prat et al. Distribution of Ages-at-Death of Fossil Hominins from the Early Pleistocene site of Drimolen, South 15 Africa: Preliminary Results and Behavioral Implications Tommaso Mori et al. A morphometric assessment of the Australopithecus sediba cranium (MH1) in relation to other Plio- 16 Pleistocene African hominin crania Martin Friess and J. Francis Thackeray The StW 99 femur and relative lower limb length of Australopithecus africanus 17 Trenton W. Holliday et al. The pathology of the proximal femur MLD 46 (Australopithecus africanus) 18 Sabine Landis and Martin Haeusler A Quantitative Analysis of the Distal Tibia Homo habilis 19 Gisselle Garcia and William Harcourt-Smith Spatial and temporal variation in the body size of early Homo 20 Manuel Will and Jay T. Stock Do non-human primates provide a good analogy for hominin dispersal? 21 Katharine MacDonald et al. Foramen magnum orientation and the cervical lordosis 22 Ella Been et al. Evolution of the human hip joint in relation to our permanent bipedal gait and posture: 3D functional 23 and comparative approaches Noémie Bonneau A global study shows that population history is a better predictor of the shape of the human os coxae 24 than climate Lia Betti et al. Asymmetry and Cephalopelvic Disproportion 25 Victoria Tobolsky The functional morphology of the seventh