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Paleolithic
Pa·le·o·lith·ic P0022300 (pā′lē-ə-lĭth′ĭk)adj. Of or relating to the cultural period of the Stone Age beginning with the earliest chipped stone tools, about 2.4 million years ago, until the beginning of the Mesolithic Period, about 15,000 to 11,500 years ago in western Asia and southern Europe.n. The Paleolithic Period. Also called Old Stone Age. See Usage Note at Three Age system.paleolithic (ˌpælɪəʊˈlɪθɪk) adj a variant spelling of PalaeolithicPa•le•o•lith•ic (ˌpeɪ li əˈlɪθ ɪk; esp. Brit. ˌpæl i-) adj. (sometimes l.c.) of, designating, or characteristic of the early phase of the Stone Age: usu. divided into three periods (Lower Paleolithic, c2,000,000–c200,000 b.c., Middle Paleolithic, c150,000–c40,000 b.c., Upper Paleolithic, c40,000–c10,000 b.c.). [1860–65] Pa·le·o·lith·ic (pā′lē-ə-lĭth′ĭk) The cultural period of the Stone Age that began about 2 million years ago, marked by the earliest use of tools made of chipped stone. The Paleolithic Period ended at different times in different parts of the world, between about 40,000 and 10,000 years ago. Compare Mesolithic, Neolithic.PaleolithicBelonging to the earliest period of the Stone Age, during which primitive human beings emerged and the first stone tools were made.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | Paleolithic - second part of the Stone Age beginning about 750,00 to 500,000 years BC and lasting until the end of the last ice age about 8,500 years BCPalaeolithic, Paleolithic AgeStone Age - (archeology) the earliest known period of human culture, characterized by the use of stone implementsLower Paleolithic - the oldest part of the Paleolithic Age with the emergence of the hand ax; ended about 120,000 years agoMiddle Paleolithic - the time period of Neanderthal man; ended about 35,000 years BCUpper Paleolithic - the time period during which only modern Homo sapiens was known to have existed; ended about 10,000 years BC | Adj. | 1. | paleolithic - of or relating to the second period of the Stone Age (following the eolithic); "paleolithic artifacts"palaeolithic | Translations
Paleolithic
Paleolithic[‚pā·lē·ō′lith·ik] (anthropology) The prehistoric period when people made stone tools exclusively by chipping or flaking; frequently defined by the time range from about 2,500,000 years ago to around the final retreat of the ice sheets about 10,300 years ago. Paleolithic (or Old Stone Age), the first of two main periods of the Stone Age. The Paleolithic was a period in which fossil man and fossil, now extinct, animal species existed. It coincides with the first great stage of the Quaternary geological period— the Pleistocene. The climate, vegetation, and animal life of the earth in the Paleolithic period differed significantly from what they are today. Paleolithic man used only chipped stone tools, not yet knowing how to polish them or fashion clay vessels. He was a hunter and gatherer, only beginning to learn to fish. Land cultivation and stock raising were unknown. The beginning of the Paleolithic period over two million years ago coincides with the appearance on earth of the first apelike men, the Archanthropinae of the Oldowayan type, Homo habilis. The end is dated to approximately 12,000 to 10,000 years ago, at the time of transition to the Mesolithic—the period between the Paleolithic and Neolithic. The Paleolithic is divided into the Lower and Upper Paleolithic. The former is further subdivided into the Oldowayan (pre-Chellean, or pebble, culture), which marks the beginning of human history; the early Acheulean (Abbevillian, or Chellean, culture); the middle and late Acheulean; and the Mousterian periods. Subdivisions of the Upper Paleolithic are confined to specific locales; there are no subdivisions that would be found everywhere. This periodization of the Paleolithic is not universal and is only partially applicable to South Africa, southern and Southeast Asia, Australia, and the Americas. Many researchers accept a three-stage rather than a two-stage division of the Paleolithic, distinguishing the Mousterian culture as Middle Paleolithic. Homo habilis existed during the Oldowayan period; Archanthropinae, including Pithecanthropus and Sinanthropus, existed in the early, middle, and late Acheulean; and Neanderthal man (Palaeoanthropus) existed in the Mousterian period. Modern man, Homo sapiens (Neoanthropinae), appeared and spread during the transition to the Upper Paleolithic. REFERENCESKamennyi vek na territorii SSSR. Moscow, 1970. Boriskovskii, P. I. Drevneishee proshloe chelovechestva. Moscow-Leningrad, 1957. Bordes, F. Le Paléolithique dans le monde. Paris, 1968.P. I. BORISKOVSKII MedicalSeePalaeolithicPaleolithic Related to Paleolithic: Paleolithic Art, Paleolithic Era, Paleolithic dietSynonyms for Paleolithicnoun second part of the Stone Age beginning about 750,00 to 500,000 years BC and lasting until the end of the last ice age about 8,500 years BCSynonyms- Palaeolithic
- Paleolithic Age
Related Words- Stone Age
- Lower Paleolithic
- Middle Paleolithic
- Upper Paleolithic
adj of or relating to the second period of the Stone Age (following the eolithic)Synonyms |