East Europe (49,293 – 28,578 BCE) Upper …
Years: 49293BCE - 28578BCE
East Europe (49,293 – 28,578 BCE) Upper Paleolithic I — Mammoth-Steppe Hunters and River-Terrace Camps
Geographic and Environmental Context
East Europe includes Belarus, Ukraine, and European Russia west of the Urals (including the forest, forest-steppe, and steppe zones and the Russian republics west of the Urals).
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Anchors: Don terraces around Kostenki–Borshchevo, Oka–Klyazma reaches near Sungir, Dnieper middle valley, Upper Dvina headwaters, and open Pripet margins.
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Periglacial steppe–tundra stretched across Ukraine–southern Russia; braided rivers cut high loess bluffs.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
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Peak Last Glacial Maximum: cold, arid, windswept; permafrost pressed south; sea levels low on the Black Sea shelf.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Foragers targeted mammoth, bison, horse, reindeer on river benches and valley shoulders; fishing and waterfowl were seasonal supplements.
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Semi-recurrent base camps on loess promontories (wind-shelter, visibility, dry footing) with hearths and butchery floors.
Technology & Material Culture
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Blade–microblade industries; burins/scrapers in high-quality cherts; bone/ivory points and needles for tailored cold-weather clothing.
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Personal ornaments (ivory, drilled teeth), extensive ochre use. (Classic burials at Sungir predate this span but signal the regional tradition.)
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Don–Oka–Dnieper trunkways structured seasonal mobility; interfluve saddles linked watersheds; reindeer/mammoth migration routes guided hunting calendars.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Portable engraved bone/ivory animal imagery; ochred burials and curated ornaments suggest shared Ice-Age symbolic repertoires across Inner Eurasia.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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High mobility, broad prey portfolios, winter windbreaks, and tailored hides enabled survival in severe periglacial regimes.
Transition
By 28,578 BCE, foragers had mapped terrace ecologies and river corridors that would organize later deglacial movements and exchanges.
