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Veerle Linseele

Researcher at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

Publications -  66
Citations -  1203

Veerle Linseele is an academic researcher from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Prehistory. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 65 publications receiving 1074 citations. Previous affiliations of Veerle Linseele include Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences.

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New excavations of Middle Stone Age deposits at Apollo 11 Rockshelter, Namibia: stratigraphy, archaeology, chronology and past environments

TL;DR: The Apollo 11 rockshelter contains the longest late Pleistocene and Holocene archaeological sequence in Namibia as mentioned in this paper, which includes an early MSA, Still Bay, Howieson's Poort and late MSA.
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New Archaeozoological Data from the Fayum “Neolithic” with a Critical Assessment of the Evidence for Early Stock Keeping in Egypt

TL;DR: Large faunal datasets from new excavations at Kom K and Kom W show that, despite the presence of domesticates, fish predominate in the animal bone assemblages, and there is continuity with the earlier Holocene occupation from the Fayum, starting ca.
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Late Quaternary environments and prehistoric occupation in the lower White Nile valley, central Sudan

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provided a qualified answer to the first question and documented affirmative answers to the second and third questions, respectively, by using the dates from three sites to the east of and three to the west of the lower White Nile.
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Species identification of archaeological dung remains: a critical review of potential methods.

TL;DR: This study presents a review of potential methods by which species identifications of archaeological dung can be undertaken and the overall aim is to move towards standardised methods for species identification of archaeologists dung.
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Fish and salt: The successful recipe of White Nile Mesolithic hunter-gatherer-fishers

TL;DR: In this paper, the earliest known examples of fish salting from Middle Mesolithic structures at an archaeological site in Central Sudan (7th millennium BC) are presented, where a multidisciplinary approach was applied, including a contextual geoarchaeological study (field analysis; micromorphological and scanning electron microscopy), a mineralogical-microstructural analysis of salt crystallization (X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscope), and a chemical analysis of salted fish bones have been found.