“…The changes in lithic and organic technologies that define the shift from the Late Middle Paleolithic (LMP) to the Early Upper Paleolithic (EUP) are observed across Eurasia, albeit in varied forms and at different times. At some sites, compelling cases can be made for local technological continuity between the LMP and EUP (Mussi, 2001;Flas, 2011;Nigst, 2012;Ruebens, 2013;Hublin, 2015;Peresani et al, 2016), whereas at others, there are no clear precedents for the EUP assemblages that appear to replace previous LMP assemblages (Tostevin, 2000(Tostevin, , 2012Skrdla, 2003Skrdla, , 2017Conard et al, 2006;Adler et al, 2006Adler et al, , 2008Richter et al, 2008;Hoffecker, 2009;Rhodes et al, 2019;Fewlass et al, 2020). Recently, revised chronologies of sites in Western Europe suggest that LMP and EUP populations could have coexisted in some regions for millennia (Higham et al, 2014;Fu et al, 2015), and chronological data show that the disappearance of the Neanderthals and other LMP populations was not temporally or geographically uniform, indicating a complex mosaic of interaction and change across Eurasia.…”