Anatoly Panteleevich Derevyanko

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Anatoly Panteleevich Derevyanko (2012)

Anatoly Panteleevich Derewjanko ( Russian Анатолий Пантелеевич Деревянко ; born January 9, 1943 in Kosmodemjanowka, Tambovka district ) is a Russian prehistoric archaeologist and university professor .

Life

The worker's son Derevyanko graduated from the historical and philological faculty of the State Pedagogical Institute Blagoveshchensk in 1963 with honors. This was followed by an apprenticeship with Alexei Pavlovich Okladnikow in the humanities department of the Institute for Economy and Industrial Production Organization of the Siberian Department (SO) of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (AN-SSSR) in Novosibirsk . In 1965 he defended his candidate dissertation on Stone Age cultures on the Middle Amur . From 1964 he was an assistant at the humanities faculty of the Novosibirsk State University (NGU) and in 1969 became a lecturer at the Department of History of the USSR .

In 1968 Derewjanko became a research assistant at the Institute for History, Philology and Philosophy (IIFiF) of the SO-AN-SSSR and in 1970 he became the deputy scientific director. In 1971 he was with his dissertation on the history of the Amur region BCE to Doctor of Historical Sciences PhD, which he was one of the youngest doctors of the USSR. In 1974 he became a professor at the chair for general history. He became a corresponding member of the AN-SSSR in 1979.

Derewjanko studied the settlement of Siberia in the Paleolithic . With his results he succeeded in structuring this time. He discovered and researched ten archaeological sites, which then served to characterize the different epochs and cultures up to the Iron Age . Examples are the cultures Nowopetrowka I, II, III and Konstantinowka on the middle Amur. He initiated and led programs for the interdisciplinary investigation of Paleolithic cave sites in southern Siberia and Central Asia . He founded the international research station Denissowa Cave in the Altai Mountains . He supported the hypothesis of the multiregional origin of modern humans with Homo sapiens africanensis in Africa , Homo sapiens orientalensis in East and Southeast Asia , Homo sapiens neanderthalensis in Europe and Homo sapiens altaiensis in North and Central Asia. Derevyanko's work has been criticized by Dawid Lazarevich Brodjanski , Juri Alexejewitsch Motschanow and others. Derevyanko participated in archaeological expeditions in Siberia, the Far East , Dagestan , Uzbekistan , Kyrgyzstan , Kazakhstan , Azerbaijan , Vietnam , Mongolia , North Korea , China , Japan , Iran and Montenegro . Together with Wladimir Konstantinowitsch Schumny , he heads the Altai International Research Center for Biosphere Sciences .

Derewjanko was chairman of the Council of Young Scientists at the Central Committee of the Komsomol , then Secretary of the Central Committee of the Komsomol (1976–1979) and Secretary of the Oblast Committee of the CPSU (1979–1980).

In 1980 Derewjanko became rector of the NGU and from 1981 headed the chair for general history. He also read about the use of science in archeology and conducted archaeological student conferences. Since 1981 he has been a member of the presidium of the SO-AN-SSSR.

From 1983 to 2015 Derevyanko was director of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography (IAE) in Novosibirsk. He is currently the scientific director of the institute. In 1984 he was the main editor of the book series on the literary monuments of Siberia of the East Siberian book publisher in Irkutsk . Since 1987 he has been a real member of the AN-SSSR (since 1991 Russian Academy of Sciences (RAN)). In 1991 he and others founded the SO-RAN History Museum. He is a member of the governing bodies of the National Committee of Russian Historians and the Russian Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences (Councilor since 1994).

Derevyanko became Scientific Advisor to the Ancient Civilizations Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences , Honorary Researcher of the Prehistory Institute of Chonbuk National University in Jeonju (1994), and Honorary Professor of the University of Arizona (1994), Tomsk Polytechnic University (1998), the Al- Farabi University (2002), Jilin University and other universities.

Derevyanko is married to Soya Mikhailovna Derevyanko, a candidate for medical science. His brother was a Doctor of History and Professor Alexei Panteleevich Derewjanko (1940-2002).

Honors, prizes

Individual evidence

  1. a b Лауреат Демидовской премии Деревянко Анатолий Пантелеевич (accessed May 18, 2018).
  2. a b Деревянко Анатолий Пантелеевич (accessed on May 21, 2018).
  3. a b IAE: Деревянко Анатолий Пантелеевич (accessed on May 21, 2018).
  4. ДЕРЕВЯНКО АНАТОЛИЙ ПАНТЕЛЕЕВИЧ (accessed on May 21, 2018).
  5. Четыре Homo sapiens, и все такие разные (accessed May 21, 2018).
  6. Нынешнее человечество является результатом смешения четырёх древних подвидов - акадвидов - акакадемик РАрере Retrieved on May 21, 2018 (.
  7. Бродянский Д. Л .: Введение в дальневосточную археологию. 3. Кондонская культура и штамповая керамика в Приморье . 1987, p. 96, 98 .
  8. Новосибирский академик А.П. Деревянко и археология Якутии (accessed May 21, 2018).
  9. Derevyanko A .: Paleolithic of North Asia and the problem of Ancient migration . Novosibirsk 1990.
  10. Derevyanko A. et al .: The Paleolithic of Siberia . Urbana, Chicago 1998.
  11. Derevyanko A. et al .: Paleolithic of the Altai . Richard Liu Foundation, European Institute of Chinese Studies, Brussels 2001.
  12. Derevyanko A .: First people in Altai . Seoul 2002.
  13. RAN: Деревянко Анатолий Пантелеевич (accessed on May 21, 2018).
  14. Усов А. В .: Научная деятельность профессора Ал. П. Деревянко (accessed May 18, 2018).
  15. Откуда пришел Homo sapiens? (accessed on May 21, 2018).