2012
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-3922-2_8
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Occupational Patterns and Subsistence Strategies in Level J of Abric Romaní

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Cited by 17 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…However, the faunal spectrum was more varied and specialized hunting behaviors focused on particular species were absent, with the only exception of the red deer exploitation at Lazaret Cave (MIS 6; Valensi, ). Mousterian faunal assemblages of southern regions are commonly composed of cervids, bovids, and equids (Pérez Ripoll, ; Martínez Valle, ; Fiore et al, ; Valensi and Psathi, ; Brown et al, ; Blasco and Fernández Peris, ; Daujeard et al, ; Rosell et al, ; Salazar‐García et al, 2013). The exploitation of dangerous taxa is evidenced by cut marks and processing activities on several species including straight‐tusked elephants at Ambrona (MIS 9; Villa et al, ), Aridos 1 (MIS 9; Soto, ), Bolomor Cave layer XII (MIS 8; Blasco and Fernández Peris, ) and Arriaga IIa (MIS 6; Rus and Vega Toscano, ); mammoths at Edar Culebro 1 (MIS 6/5; Yravedra et al, ) and Preresa (MIS 5; Yravedra et al, ); cave bears at Fate Cave (MIS 5) and Madonna dell' Arma (MIS 5) and brown bears at Manie Cave (Valensi and Psathi, ); lions in Gran Dolina TD10‐1 (MIS 9) (Blasco et al, ); and Iberian dholes in Cova Negra (MIS 5d‐b; Pérez Ripoll et al, ).…”
Section: Technological and Zooarchaeological Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the faunal spectrum was more varied and specialized hunting behaviors focused on particular species were absent, with the only exception of the red deer exploitation at Lazaret Cave (MIS 6; Valensi, ). Mousterian faunal assemblages of southern regions are commonly composed of cervids, bovids, and equids (Pérez Ripoll, ; Martínez Valle, ; Fiore et al, ; Valensi and Psathi, ; Brown et al, ; Blasco and Fernández Peris, ; Daujeard et al, ; Rosell et al, ; Salazar‐García et al, 2013). The exploitation of dangerous taxa is evidenced by cut marks and processing activities on several species including straight‐tusked elephants at Ambrona (MIS 9; Villa et al, ), Aridos 1 (MIS 9; Soto, ), Bolomor Cave layer XII (MIS 8; Blasco and Fernández Peris, ) and Arriaga IIa (MIS 6; Rus and Vega Toscano, ); mammoths at Edar Culebro 1 (MIS 6/5; Yravedra et al, ) and Preresa (MIS 5; Yravedra et al, ); cave bears at Fate Cave (MIS 5) and Madonna dell' Arma (MIS 5) and brown bears at Manie Cave (Valensi and Psathi, ); lions in Gran Dolina TD10‐1 (MIS 9) (Blasco et al, ); and Iberian dholes in Cova Negra (MIS 5d‐b; Pérez Ripoll et al, ).…”
Section: Technological and Zooarchaeological Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the European Middle Palaeolithic, retouched bone artefacts were rarely investigated for taphonomic and technological traces (Bordes, 1961;Cabrera Valdes, 1984;Vincent, 1993) and, when this was done, a number of specimens can be considered as pseudo-artefacts (d 'Errico and Villa, 1997). More reliable evidence is represented by a bifacially retouched bone fragment from Vaufrey Cave (France) (Vincent, 1988), some denticulated diaphyses and a pointed tool on auroch mandible (Rosell et al, 2012) from Abric Romaní (Spain), and some trihedral picks on tibia of rhinoceros found at Gruta Nova de Columbeira (Portugal) (Barandiarán et al, 1971) dated to 87.1 ± 6.3 ka BP (Zilhão et al, 2011). To indicate that Neanderthals during the Middle Palaeolithic made use of a set of bone technologies, there are the rare tools worked by abrasion that are dated to the first half of MIS3 from Salzgitter-Lebenstedt, Germany (Gaudzinski, 1999) and the bone smoothers recovered from the Mousterian of Acheulean Tradition at Pech-de-l'Azé I and Abri Peyrony, France (Soressi et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, these strata are delineated by culturally sterile layers. The conspicuous dearth of carnivore remains observed in comparison to other sites in Spain, such as Abric Romaní (Rosell et al, 2012(Rosell et al, , 2019, L'Arbreda Cave (Estévez, 1987;Lloveras et al, 2010), and Moros de Gabasa (Blasco, 1995(Blasco, , 1997Blasco Sancho and Montes Ramírez, 1997), underscores the exceptional nature of the faunal assemblage at Abric Pizarro. In contrast to these sites, where the percentage of carnivore remains is considerably higher, Abric Pizarro and its neighbouring sites, including Cova Gran de Santa Linya and Roca dels Bous (Benito-Calvo et al, 2020;Samper Carro et al, 2020), exhibit a significantly lower prevalence of carnivore remains.…”
Section: Site Formation and Occupation Processesmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Given the extensive deposition over thousands of years, it becomes challenging to formulate hypotheses regarding site use or seasonality. Observations from numerous other sites within the same spatiotemporal region, including Covalejos Cave (Sánchez-Hernández et al, 2019), Cova Gran de Santa Linya ( Samper Carro et al, 2020), Abric Romaní (Fernández-Laso et al, 2010Rosell et al, 2012), Cueva del Esquilleu (Yravedra Sáinz de los Terreros et al, 2014), El Castillo (Pike-Tay et al, 1999, Pié Lombard (Texier et al, 2011), and Abri du Maras (Daujeard et al, 2019;Moncel et al, 2021) indicate a general pattern of seasonal site use. However, the highly fragmented nature of the assemblage, along with potential biases in conducting age-at-death determinations, such as the greater ease in identifying very young individuals, presents challenges in confidently assessing occupation patterns at Abric Pizarro.…”
Section: Site Formation and Occupation Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%