Robert G. Bednarik

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Robert G. Bednarik

Robert G. Bednarik (born 6 April 1944 in

archeologist
.

Robert Bednarik moved from Austria to Australia in 1966. Bednarik, who considers himself an

experimental archeology
and edits four scientific journals.

According to Bednarik, he has published more than 1450 scientific articles since 1965.[1] He is professor at the International Centre of Rock Art Dating (ICRAD) at the Hebei Normal University in Shijiazhuang (China).[2]

Bednarik's principal research interest is the origins of the human ability to create constructs of reality; consequently, his research focuses on the origins of art,[3] language, and the development of hominid technology.[4]

Publications (selection)

Books
Articles
  • On the cognitive development of hominids. In: Man and Environment 15(2), 1990, S. 1–7.
  • Palaeoart and archaeological myths. In: Cambridge Archaeological Journal 2(1), 1992, 27–43.
  • Concept-mediated marking in the Lower Palaeolithic. In: Current Anthropology 36(4), 1995, 605–634.
  • The ‘australopithecine’ cobble from Makapansgat, South Africa. South African Archaeological Bulletin 53: 1998, 4–8.
  • The dating of rock art: a critique. In: Journal of Archaeological Science 29(11), 2002, 1213–1233.
  • The oldest surviving rock art: a taphonomic review. In: Origini 24, 2002, 335–349.
  • The earliest evidence of palaeoart. In: Rock Art Research 20 (2), 2003, 89–135.
  • Children as Pleistocene artists. In: Rock Art Research 25 (2), 2008, 173–182.
  • The domestication of humans. In: Anthropologie 46(1), 2008, 1–17.
  • The mythical Moderns. In: Journal of World Prehistory 21(2), 2008, 85–102.
  • An aetiology of hominin behaviour. In: HOMO — Journal of Comparative Human Biology 63, 2012, 319–335; doi:10.1016/j.jchb.2012.07.004
  • The tribology of cupules. In: Geological Magazine 152(4), 2015, S. 758–765; doi:10.1017/S0016756815000060
  • The science of cupules. In: Archaeometry 58(6), 2016, S. 899-911; doi: 10.1111/arcm.12216
  • Compressive-tensile rock markings. In: Geological Magazine 156(12), 2019, S. 2113-2116; doi:10.1017/S0016756819001079
  • Archaeotribology: the interaction of surfaces in relative motion in archaeology. In: Tribology International 141; doi:10.1016/j.triboint.2020.106198
  • About the origins of the human ability to create constructs of reality. In: Axiomathes; doi:10.1007/s10516-021-09537-8

References

  1. ^ [self-published source]"Publications by R. G. Bednarik – AURANET".
  2. ^ [self-published source]www.ifrao.com
  3. ^ [self-published source]Robert G. Bednarik: The earliest evidence of palaeoart. In: Rock Art Research 20 (2):2003, 89–135.
  4. ^ [self-published source]Robert Bednarik: The first mariners. In: The American Neptune 61 (3): 2002, 317–324.

External links