Erella Hovers (born 1956) is an Israeli paleoanthropologist. She is currently a professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, working within the Institute of Archeology. The majority of her field work is centered in the Horn of Africa, with a primary focus on Ein Qashish, Israel and Eastern Ethiopia. Her research concentrates on the development of the use of symbolism during the Levantine Middle Palaeolithic and Middle Stone Age. Other research interests include lithic technology, taphonomy, and general behavior of early hominids.[1]
^"Institute of Archaeology - Departments & Units - Department of Prehistory".
ErellaHovers (born 1956) is an Israeli paleoanthropologist. She is currently a professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, working within the Institute...
Krakovsky; Polina Spivak; Micka Ullman; Ariel Vered; Omry Barzilai; ErellaHovers (2019). "Persistent Neanderthal occupation of the open-air site of 'Ein...
Greenbaum, Gili; Getz, Wayne M.; Rosenberg, Noah A.; Feldman, Marcus W.; Hovers, Erella; Kolodny, Oren (2019-11-01). "Disease transmission and introgression...
Oldest Stone Tools". Scientific American. Retrieved 18 April 2015. Hovers, Erella (May 2015). "Archaeology: Tools go back in time". Nature. 521 (7552):...
Lorenzo; Niespolo, Elizabeth M.; Renne, Paul R.; Herzlinger, Gadi; Hovers, Erella (2023-05-16). "The earliest Ethiopian wolf: implications for the species...
(New York: Palgrave, 2000), p. 8 Gossa, Tegenu; Asrat, Asfawossen; Hovers, Erella; Tholt, Andrew J.; Renne, Paul R. (15 February 2024). "Claims for 1...
Bipedality: The Case of the Gerenuk (Litocranius walleri)". In Marom, Assaf; Hovers, Erella (eds.). Human Paleontology and Prehistory. Vertebrate Paleobiology and...