TY - JOUR
T1 - In glacial environments beyond glacial terrains
T2 - Human eco-dynamics in late Pleistocene Mediterranean Iberia
AU - Barton, C Michael
AU - Villaverde, Valentin
AU - Zilhão, João
AU - Aura, J. Emili
AU - Garcia, Oreto
AU - Badal, Ernestina
N1 - Funding Information: We want to thank Jonathan Haws and Nuno Bicho for organizing the symposium at the Society for American Archaeology meetings (2012) that stimulated this synthesis and for compiling this special issue of Quaternary International. This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation (USA) grants BNS-9115209 , SBR-9904050 , BCS-0075292 , and BCS-0331583 ; a Fulbright Senior Research Fellowship from the Committee for the International Exchange of Scholars ; and Ministry of Science and Innovation (Spain) projects FFI2008-01200/FISO, CGL2009-06988, HAR2008-03005, HAR2011-24878, and HAR2012-33111.
PY - 2013/12/18
Y1 - 2013/12/18
N2 - The Iberian Peninsula south of the Ebro River enjoyed one of the mildest climates of Pleistocene Europe, but still experienced significant and rapid environmental shifts caused by global climate regimes. We examine the interplay between technological, social, and land-use dynamics as culturally mediated responses to climate change outside the periglacial zone. We combine information from excavated sites across eastern and southeastern Spain with systematic survey data from an intensive study area within this larger region to examine Upper Paleolithic behavioral adaptations to the environmental shifts of the late Pleistocene (late MIS-3 through MIS-2). We define indexes that serve as proxies for land-use strategies, technological specialization, and hunting practices. Variation in these indices across space and through time provides the basis for a model of Upper Paleolithic eco-dynamics. A consistent pattern of land-use, involving inland (and possibly coastal) base-camps and near-coastal hunting zones spanned the Mediterranean facade and was sufficiently flexible and resilient to environmental change to persist throughout the late Pleistocene.
AB - The Iberian Peninsula south of the Ebro River enjoyed one of the mildest climates of Pleistocene Europe, but still experienced significant and rapid environmental shifts caused by global climate regimes. We examine the interplay between technological, social, and land-use dynamics as culturally mediated responses to climate change outside the periglacial zone. We combine information from excavated sites across eastern and southeastern Spain with systematic survey data from an intensive study area within this larger region to examine Upper Paleolithic behavioral adaptations to the environmental shifts of the late Pleistocene (late MIS-3 through MIS-2). We define indexes that serve as proxies for land-use strategies, technological specialization, and hunting practices. Variation in these indices across space and through time provides the basis for a model of Upper Paleolithic eco-dynamics. A consistent pattern of land-use, involving inland (and possibly coastal) base-camps and near-coastal hunting zones spanned the Mediterranean facade and was sufficiently flexible and resilient to environmental change to persist throughout the late Pleistocene.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.quaint.2013.05.007
DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2013.05.007
M3 - Article
SN - 1040-6182
VL - 318
SP - 53
EP - 68
JO - Quaternary International
JF - Quaternary International
ER -