2017
DOI: 10.1080/00934690.2016.1260407
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First Evidence of Collective Human Inhumation from the Cardial Neolithic (Cova Bonica, Barcelona, NE Iberian Peninsula)

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…the Catalonia region, appears to be another good source of comparison (north-western Spain's transition to Neolithic occurring later in the 5 th millennium, Robb 2015: 972), with several well-studied cave burials dated to the 6 th millennium. A striking example is the recently re-analysed and radiocarbon dated Cova Bonica (Vallirana, Barcelona: Oms et al, 2017a), along with Cova Foradada (Calafell, Tarragona: Oms et al, 2016) and Cova de Can Sadurní (Edo et al, 2011(Edo et al, , 2017: in these sites, a depositional practice comparable to that of Mora Cavorso Cave has been recognised, with the bodies of all age classes and probably both sexes (Oms et al, 2017a) being laid directly on the cave floor and later moved (causing skeletal disarticulation and bone piling) to make space for the new ones. Although Oms et al (2017b) raise some doubts about the nature of grave goods of the artefacts found in association with chaotically distributed human bones, they confirm the overall scarcity of these, which is a recurring feature also in other early Neolithic burial sites of the Iberian Peninsula and in the rest of Europe.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the Catalonia region, appears to be another good source of comparison (north-western Spain's transition to Neolithic occurring later in the 5 th millennium, Robb 2015: 972), with several well-studied cave burials dated to the 6 th millennium. A striking example is the recently re-analysed and radiocarbon dated Cova Bonica (Vallirana, Barcelona: Oms et al, 2017a), along with Cova Foradada (Calafell, Tarragona: Oms et al, 2016) and Cova de Can Sadurní (Edo et al, 2011(Edo et al, , 2017: in these sites, a depositional practice comparable to that of Mora Cavorso Cave has been recognised, with the bodies of all age classes and probably both sexes (Oms et al, 2017a) being laid directly on the cave floor and later moved (causing skeletal disarticulation and bone piling) to make space for the new ones. Although Oms et al (2017b) raise some doubts about the nature of grave goods of the artefacts found in association with chaotically distributed human bones, they confirm the overall scarcity of these, which is a recurring feature also in other early Neolithic burial sites of the Iberian Peninsula and in the rest of Europe.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Archaeological work in the last decade has broadened our understanding of the spread of Neolithic way of life in the uplands of the Southern Central Pyrenees [22,23,25,33,88,89,98,100,101]. Traditionally, such high altitude mountain areas were mainly considered as transit zones [102,103].…”
Section: Caprine Mobile Herding and Management: Implications For The mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neither area shows systematic gender differentiation (Fowler 2010; Sjögren 2015). The Iberian Early Neolithic featured collective inhumations in cave sites among other practices; again, gendered differentiation in funerary practice or grave goods is difficult to detect (Oms et al 2017).…”
Section: Gender In the European Neolithicmentioning
confidence: 99%