Despite many years of research into the Middle Palaeolithic in the Zagros Mountains, numerous aspects of this period have not yet been sufficiently investigated. The topics of Middle Palaeolithic's cultural behavioures, temporal changes, chronology, and the nature of the transition from the Middle to the Upper Palaeolithic in this region have led to various opinions and debates. Three seasons of archaeological excavations at the Bawa Yawan Rockshelter, located in the west-central Zagros, have uncovered a continuous stratigraphic sequence spanning from the Middle to the Epipalaeolithic periods. The site yielded in situ Neanderthal remains along with a substantial assemblage of lithic and faunal materials. The findings suggest a relatively homogeneous Mousterian lithic trajectory throughout the Middle Palaeolithic period, with slight variations likely reflecting differences in hunting strategies. Furthermore, these data indicate a cyclical pattern in population size dynamics, likely in response to climatic variations during the late Marine Isotope Stage 5a to the middle of 3. The data reveal that the Neanderthals, after a relatively substantial period in late MIS 5, experienced a demographic stagnation in MIS 4. The same data shows that their population grew significantly just before extinction around 45,000 to 40,000 years ago.
This article represents a step forward in understanding human evolution during the Late Pleistocene in the Zagros Mountains, within the territory of Southwestern Asia.
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