Hallinan, EmilyBarzilai, OmryBeshkani, AmirCascalheira, JoãoDemidenko, Yuri E.Goder‐Goldberger, MaeHilbert, Yamandú H.Hovers, ErellaMarks, Anthony E.Nymark, AndreasOlszewski, Deborah I.Oron, MayaRose, Jeffrey I.Shaw, MatthewUsik, Vitaly I.2022-12-212022-12-2120221060-1538http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/18690Nubian Levallois technology has recently risen to the forefront ofdebates surrounding Late Pleistocene human technological behavior,cultural traditions, and demographic histories. Named after the regionwhere it was first identified, Nubian Levallois describes a specificmethod of lithic point production that occurs in Middle Palaeolithic (or Middle Stone Age) assemblages across arid North Africa, the Levant and Arabia.1–9However, the recent identification of Nubian technology in separate, disconnected regions, such as SouthAfrica10–12and possibly India13,14suggests there are more diversescenarios of its emergence and spread than the original model of abroad Nubian technocomplex related to a single, expandingpopulation from its north‐east African heartland.3While fewassemblages containing Nubian technology are directly dated, itsproposed MIS 5 timing coincides with early modern human dispersalsout of Africa, adding a further dimension of whether certain lithictechnologies can be linked to specific geographic populations.engThe nature of Nubian: developing current global perspectives on Nubian Levallois technology and the Nubian complexjournal article10.1002/evan.21958