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- Q1088939 subject Q8259029.
- Q1088939 subject Q8711509.
- Q1088939 subject Q8790425.
- Q1088939 abstract "The Kebaran or Kebarian culture was an archaeological culture in the eastern Mediterranean area (c. 18,000 to 12,500 BC), named after its type site, Kebara Cave south of Haifa. The Kebaran were a highly mobile nomadic population, composed of hunters and gatherers in the Levant and Sinai areas who utilized microlithic tools.The Kebaran is the last Upper Paleolithic phase of the Levant (Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine). The Kebarans were characterized by small, geometric microliths, and were thought to lack the specialized grinders and pounders found in later Near Eastern cultures.The Kebaran is preceded by the Athlitian phase of the Antelian and followed by the proto-agrarian Natufian culture of the Epipalaeolithic. The Kebaran is also characterised by the earliest collecting of wild cereals, known due to the uncovering of grain grinding tools. It was the first step towards the Neolithic Revolution. The Kebaran people are believed to have practiced dispersal to upland environments in the summer, and aggregation in caves and rockshelters near lowland lakes in the winter. This diversity of environments may be the reason for the variety of tools found in their toolkits.Situated in the Terminal Pleistocene, the Kebaran is classified as an Epipalaeolithic society. They are generally thought to have been ancestral to the later Natufian culture that occupied much of the same range.".
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q160302.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q164777.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q1737670.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q180548.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q23792.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q25546.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q36755.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q41621.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q4771138.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q479505.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q48214.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q4918.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q733489.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q801.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q810.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q81483.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q822.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q8259029.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q829005.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q858.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q8711509.
- Q1088939 wikiPageWikiLink Q8790425.
- Q1088939 comment "The Kebaran or Kebarian culture was an archaeological culture in the eastern Mediterranean area (c. 18,000 to 12,500 BC), named after its type site, Kebara Cave south of Haifa. The Kebaran were a highly mobile nomadic population, composed of hunters and gatherers in the Levant and Sinai areas who utilized microlithic tools.The Kebaran is the last Upper Paleolithic phase of the Levant (Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine).".
- Q1088939 label "Kebaran".