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  2. Don Crabtree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Crabtree

    Don E. Crabtree was born in Heyburn, Idaho on June 8, 1912. He finished high school in Twin Falls in 1930, after which he worked for the Idaho Power Company. After a brief period he traveled to California where he enrolled in Long Beach Junior College in the mid-1930s with the intent to major in geology and paleontology.

  3. Nicholas Toth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Toth

    Toth has engaged in field and laboratory research since the late 1970s, resulting in scientific publications on a variety of topics including human evolution, African prehistory, Paleolithic studies, the evolution of human intelligence, lithic technology, raw materials of antiquity, experimental archaeology, microscopic approaches to ...

  4. Lithic technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithic_technology

    The archaeological record of lithic technology is divided into three major time periods: the Paleolithic (Old Stone Age), Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age), and Neolithic (New Stone Age). Not all cultures in all parts of the world exhibit the same pattern of lithic technological development, and stone tool technology continues to be used to this ...

  5. Kathy Schick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathy_Schick

    Schick was born to a middle-class family. Her father was an engraver, who inspired Schick for her interest in crafts and tools as a child. Years after her father’s passing at the age of 10, she began studying paleoanthropology in college, focusing on the study of the human brain’s evolution in relation to culture.

  6. Harold L. Dibble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_L._Dibble

    Dibble received his B.A. in 1971 and Ph.D. in 1981, both from the University of Arizona.He wrote his dissertation under the direction of Arthur J. Jelinek, [1] an American archaeologist who had been trained in North American prehistoric archaeology by Leslie A. White and who worked on both the Paleolithic of Western Eurasia and the Mimbres culture in New Mexico. [2]

  7. John Shea (archaeologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Shea_(archaeologist)

    John J. Shea (2017) Occasional, Obligatory, and Habitual Stone Tool Use in Hominin Lithic Technology. Evolutionary Anthropology 26: 200–217.* John J. Shea (2015) Making and Using Stone Tools: Advice for Learners and Teachers and Insights for Archaeologists. Lithic Technology 40 (3): 231–248.

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