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Book of Sessions Book of sessions Livret des sessions (Sept-2017) Sessions congrès - Congress sessions UISPP Paris (sept-2017) I. SESSIONS GENERALES UISPP ................................................................................................. 3 II. THEME DU CONGRES/ CONGRESS THEME ........................................................................ 4 III. COMMISSION METHODES ET THEORIE DE L’ARCHEOLOGIE/ THEORY AND METHODS OF ARCHAEOLOGY ....................................................................................................................... 9 IV. TECHNOLOGIE/TECHNOLOGY ....................................................................................... 11 V. ARCHEOLOGIE SOUS-MARINE//SUB-MARINE ARCHAEOLOGY .............................. 15 VI. ETHNOARCHEOLOGIE/ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY ....................................................... 16 VII. COMMISSION HISTORIOGRAPHIE/ HISTORY OF ARCHAEOLOGY ..................... 18 VIII. COMMISSION PROSPECTION ARCHEOLOGIQUE/ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROSPECTION 20 IX. COMMISSION LANDSCAPE/THEORY AND METHODS IN LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY 21 X. COMMISSION ARCHÉOMÉTRIE/ARCAHEOMETRY ...................................................... 22 XI. COMMISSION DATATIONS/CHRONOLOGIES AND CONSTRAINTS OFPREHISTORIC SITES 23 XII. COMMISSION TRACEOLOGIE .......................................................................................... 24 XIII. COMMISSION BONE INDUSTRY ...................................................................................... 26 XIV. COMMISSION ACHEULEEN ............................................................................................... 28 XV. COMMISSION PALEOLITHIQUE MOYEN 1 (N. CONARD) ........................................ 31 XVI. COMMISSION PALEOLITHIQUE MOYEN 2 (A. RINGER) ......................................... 32 XVII. COMMISSION PALÉOLITHIQUE SUPÉRIEUR D’EURASIE ....................................... 37 XVIII. COMMISSION PALEOLITHIQUE FINAL..................................................................... 41 XIX. COMMISSION MÉSOLITHIQUE ........................................................................................ 43 XX. COMMISSION COASTAL .................................................................................................... 45 XXI. COMMISSION MONTAGNE ............................................................................................... 45 XXII. COMMISSION SAHARA ...................................................................................................... 47 XXIII. COMMISSION AFRIQUE DU NORD ............................................................................. 49 XXIV. COMMISSION AFRIQUE CENTRALE .......................................................................... 50 XXV. COMMISSION AMÉRIQUE ................................................................................................. 51 XXVI. COMMISSION ASIE DU SUD-EST ................................................................................. 55 XXVII. COMMISSION ASIE EXTREME ORIENT ..................................................................... 55 XXVIII. COMMISSION ART .......................................................................................................... 55 XXIX. COMMISSION ANATI ...................................................................................................... 62 XXX. COMMISSION FUNÉRAIRE ............................................................................................... 62 XXXI. COMMISSION ANTHROPOLOGIE BIOLOGIQUE ..................................................... 64 XXXII. COMMISSION NEOLITHIQUE....................................................................................... 66 XXXIII. COMMISSION FLINT MINING ...................................................................................... 69 XXXIV. COMMISSION AGE DES METAUX................................................................................ 70 XXXV. COMMISSION HERITAGE .............................................................................................. 77 XXXVI. COMMISSION ARCHÉOLOGIE PRÉVENTIVE ........................................................... 80 XXXVII. ARCHÉOZOOLOGIE ........................................................................................................ 80 XXXVIII. OCÉANIE PACIFIQUE ................................................................................................. 81 1 XXXIX. HORS COMMISSIONS ..................................................................................................... 82 2 I. SESSIONS GENERALES UISPP I-1. Techniques, méthodes et théorie de l’archéologie I-2. Paléolithique inférieur et moyen I-3. Paléolithique supérieur, paléolithique final et Mésolithique I-4. Néolithique I-5. Age des métaux 3 II. THEME DU CONGRES/CONGRESS THEME II-1. Chasseurs-cueilleurs et agriculteurs face aux changements climatiques: adaptation et développement durable / Hunter-gatherers and farmers faced with climate change : adaptation and sustainability François Djindjian1, Luiz Oosterbeek 1 Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne UMR 7041 Arscan – Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne UMR 7041 Arscan – France L’objet de cette session est de traiter la réponse des sociétés humaines, de chasseurs-cueilleurs comme d’agriculteurs - éleveurs face aux changements climatiques depuis les débuts de la préhistoire pendant le pléistocène et l’Holocène. Pour les chasseurs-cueilleurs, les thèmes abordés concernent plus particulièrement la mobilité, les ressources alimentaires, la chasse, la cueillette, les accès aux matières premières, la démographie, la dimension du territoire, les migrations saison- nières, les conquêtes ou les abandons de territoire. Pour les agriculteurs- éleveurs, les thèmes abordés concernent plus particulièrement la domestication animale, les espèces cultivées, les rendements agricoles, les systèmes agricoles, la sédentarité, le pastoralisme, le nomadisme, les zones cultivées, l’irrigation, la conquête de nouvelles terres, l’abandon de zones cultivées, etc. The purpose of this session is to understand the response of human societies of hunter-gatherers and farmers since the beginnings of the prehistory during the Pleistocene and the Holocene climate. For hunters-gatherers, themes particularly concern mobility, food resources, hunting, gathering, access to raw materials, demographics, size of the territory, the seasonal migrations, conquests or abandonment of territory. For the farmers, the themes concern animal domestication, crops, agricultural yields, farming systems, sedentary lifestyle, pastoralism, nomadism, cultivated areas, irrigation, conquest of new lands, abandonment of cultivated areas, etc. II-2. The impact of Upper Pleistocene climatic and environmental change on hominin occupations and landscape use (130-10 ka) William Davies1, Philip Nigst2 1 University of Southampton (Southampton, UK) – Centre for the Archaeology of Human Origins (CAHO), Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities, Avenue Campus, Southampton, SO17 1BF., Royaume-Uni 2 University of Cambridge (UK) (CAM) – Division of Archaeology Department of Archaeology and Anthropology University of Cambridge Downing Street Cambridge CB2 3DZ, Royaume-Uni This session will explore changing hominin occupation patterns and landscape use in the light of different scales of climatic and environmental change. Its scope is not restricted to western Eurasia, but will examine these changes (including population dispersal and contraction) at a variety of scales, from the local to the global. We would be pleased to include contributions from Palaeolithic specialists working in Eurasia, Africa, Australasia and the Americas. In particular, we invite interdisciplinary contributions exploring the following themes: The spatio-temporal scales of climatic and environmental changes in the Upper Pleistocene (130-10 ka). The extent to which abrupt environmental transitions can be linked to changes in hominin occupation or behaviour. The extent to which energetic considerations (e.g. metabolism, mobility strategies) can be used to explain changes in hominin behaviour. How social networks and material culture might have been used to mitigate environmental and climatic changes. Investigating these themes encompasses (but is not limited to) studies of raw material provisioning patterns and energetic costs; the costs and benefi of broadening diets and implications for mobility strategies; the impact of stable isotopic studies on reconstructing past faunal and hominin movements; the importance of 4 environmental productivity to the distributions of fauna and hominins; the impact of seasonal variation in resource availability; the impact of environmental conditions on toolkit diversity. II-3. Systèmes agropastoraux et dégradations climatiques. Analyse intégrée des données archéologiques et paléoenvironnementales Christophe Petit1,2, Michelle Elliott2,3, Nicolas Bernigaud 4,5, Cyril Marcigny6, 1 Archéologies et Sciences de l’Antiquité (ArScAn) – Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne, CNRS : UMR7041, Université Paris X - Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense – Maison René Ginouvès Boîte 3 21, allée de l’université 92023 NANTERRE CEDEX, France 2 Université Paris 1, Panthéon-Sorbonne (UP1) – Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne – 12 place du Panthéon - 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France 3 Archéologies et Sciences de l’Antiquité (ArScAn) – Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne, CNRS : UMR7041 – Maison René Ginouvès Boîte 3 21, allée de l’université 92023 NANTERRE CEDEX, France 4 École pratique des hautes études
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