Mitja BrodarMitja (Demetrij) Brodar (1921 – 16 February 2012) was a Slovenian paleontologist. He was a son of Srečko Brodar, a pioneer of the study of the Paleolithic period in Slovenia. In the 1960s and 1970s Brodar, together with France Osole, was leading the Paleolithic research in Slovenia.[1] LifeHe was born in 1921 in Celje where his father was at the time teaching science at the Grammar school in Celje. During Italian occupation of Ljubljana in WW2 he joined the anti-Nazi resistance movement, was captured in 1942 and sent to the Italian concentration camps in Rab, Reka [Fiume] and in Visco.[2] Education and WorkBrodar studied civil engineering at the University of Ljubljana, at the wish of his father (graduated in 1949). Later he also studied geology and paleontology with graduation in 1953.[1] Since 1952 he was a member of Ljubljana Cave Exploration Society (DZRJL).[3] Between 1954 and 1956 and in 1960 he was excavating the cave Mokriška jama. He received PhD in 1959 with a thesis on those excavations.[1] Betal Rock Shelter (Betalov spodmol) is another site he was excavating.[4] He helped establish and was during the 1970s president of the Slovene archaeological association. Together with his father he wrote a book on Potok Cave (Slovene: Potočka zijalka) excavations.[5]
Brodar disputed the Divje Babe flute, believing that it was not a musical artifact, and that Neanderthal did not make such artifacts.[6]
Brodar published a synthesis of his research in an open-access Slovenian-German bilingual monograph Stara kamena doba v Sloveniji = Altsteinzeit in Slowenien [Old Stone Age in Slovenia] (2009, Ljubljana, 717 pp.). References
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