scholarly journals Neanderthal mobility and technological change in the northeastern of the Iberian Peninsula: The patterns of chert exploitation at the Abric Romaní rock-shelter

2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 581-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Picin ◽  
Eudald Carbonell
2012 ◽  
Vol 247 ◽  
pp. 313-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josep Vallverdú ◽  
Susana Alonso ◽  
Amèlia Bargalló ◽  
Raúl Bartrolí ◽  
Gerard Campeny ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Manuel Gabriel López Payer ◽  
Miguel Soria Lerma

En este artículo se presenta el Abrigo del Melgar (Sierra de Quesada), el cual contiene una serie de pinturas que aportan nuevos datos con relación a la cronología y el significado del arte rupestre esquemático del Sudeste de la Península Ibérica. Se sitúa la realización de estas representaciones en la Edad del Cobre, y se intenta precisar la cronología de la estación dentro del núcleo de Quesada.This article concerns the Melgar rock shelter (Quesada Mountain Range), which contains a series oí paintings that provides new Information about the chronology and meaning of schematic rock art in the Southeast of the Iberian Península. The achievement of these pictures it's dated in the Copper Age, and the chronology of the station has been tried to fix within the Quesada group.


Author(s):  
Pedro RASINES DEL RÍO ◽  
Julià MAROTO ◽  
Emilio MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ ◽  
José Manuel MORLOTE-EXPÓSITO ◽  
undefined Pedro María CASTAÑOS-UGARTE ◽  
...  

The Iberian Peninsula is one of the key areas for studying the last populations of Neanderthals and the arrival in Europe of the first anatomically modern humans. In the Cantabrian region, this process can be traced in just a few sites with levels dating to the final stages of the Middle Palaeolithic and the earliest phases of the Upper Palaeolithic. One of these singular enclaves is El Cuco rock-shelter, where the sequence was initially dated by 14C only to the early Upper Palaeolithic sensu lato. However, new studies and datings now place this archaeological sequence in the late Mousterian and the Aurignacian. In this article we present a chrono-cultural reassessment of the upper levels of El Cuco (III-V), including a study of the large mammals. Levels Vc and Vb (>43.5-40.5 ky uncal BP) date from the late Mousterian, whereas levels Va, IV and III (c. 36.5-30 ky uncal BP) cover an interval extending at least from the Early Aurignacian to the Evolved Aurignacian. Particularly noteworthy is the discovery in level Va of a set of decorative beads made from marine shells in a context of possible symbolic behaviour.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Mallol ◽  
Cristo Hernández ◽  
Norbert Mercier ◽  
Christophe Falguères ◽  
Ángel Carrancho ◽  
...  

AbstractThere is a relatively low amount of Middle Paleolithic sites in Europe dating to MIS 4. Of the few that exist, several of them lack evidence for anthropogenic fire, raising the question of how this period of global cooling may have affected the Neanderthal population. The Iberian Peninsula is a key area to explore this issue, as it has been considered as a glacial refugium during critical periods of the Neanderthal timeline and might therefore yield archaeological contexts in which we can explore possible changes in the behaviour and settlement patterns of Neanderthal groups during MIS 4. Here we report recent data from Abric del Pastor, a small rock shelter in Alcoy (Alicante, Spain) with a stratified deposit containing Middle Palaeolithic remains. We present absolute dates that frame the sequence within MIS 4 and multi-proxy geoarchaeological evidence of in situ anthropogenic fire, including microscopic evidence of in situ combustion residues and thermally altered sediment. We also present archaeostratigraphic evidence of recurrent, functionally diverse, brief human occupation of the rock shelter. Our results suggest that Neanderthals occupied the Central Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula during MIS 4, that these Neanderthals were not undergoing climatic stress and they were habitual fire users.


2018 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 180-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Kehl ◽  
David Álvarez-Alonso ◽  
María de Andrés-Herrero ◽  
Andrés Díez-Herrero ◽  
Nicole Klasen ◽  
...  

AbstractThe timing of the late Middle Paleolithic and late disappearance of Neanderthals in the Iberian Peninsula are hotly debated subjects in Paleolithic archeology. Several studies suggested a late survival in South and Central Iberia until about 32 ka, but were probably subject to significant age underestimation due to contamination of dating samples, undiagnostic lithic assemblages, and/or lack of stratigraphic integrity. We conducted a radiocarbon and luminescence-dating study backed by detailed sedimentological and micromorphological investigations at the newly discovered rock shelter sequence of Abrigo del Molino (Central Spain). Accumulation of the sediment sequence was rapid. It started with deposition of paleoflood slack-water deposits at around 48 ka and continued until about 41 ka with deposition of colluvial and detrital sediments. These contain two Mousterian levels, which place the latest Neanderthal occupation at around 45 to 41 ka, i.e., between Heinrich Stadials 5 and 4, and probably during a time of climate amelioration. Abrigo del Molino thus provides a detailed and chronologically well-constrained record of Late Neanderthal presence and morphodynamic change in Central Iberia during times of millennial-scale climate changes. The site gives further evidence for an early disappearance of Neanderthals in Central Iberia.


Author(s):  
Amèlia Bargalló ◽  
Maria Joana Gabucio ◽  
Bruno Gómez de Soler ◽  
M. Gema Chacón ◽  
Manuel Vaquero
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Gómez de Soler ◽  
María Soto ◽  
Josep Vallverdú ◽  
Amèlia Bargalló ◽  
M. Gema Chacón ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 269 ◽  
pp. 107142
Author(s):  
Abel Moclán ◽  
Rosa Huguet ◽  
Belén Márquez ◽  
César Laplana ◽  
María Ángeles Galindo-Pellicena ◽  
...  

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