2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2014.09.026
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The first farmers in Cantabrian Spain: Contribution of numerical chronology to understand an historical process

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Cited by 46 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(18 reference statements)
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“…The only exceptions are the earliest centuries (c. 8500-8300 cal BP) in areas such as the Atlantic-European, the LusitanoAndalusian, and the Central Iberian, which fall outside the 95 % confidence level (2σ) of the null hypothesis and thus diverge statistically from the expected pattern. This observation, previously noted (Fano et al 2015), is in line with the scarce number of radiocarbon dates in the Mediterranean basin recognizable in similar chronologies (Berger and Guilaine 2009) and is to be regarded within regular oscillations in radiocalibrated 14 C trends during the Iberian Mesolithic (Bernabeu Aubán et al 2014, pp. 217-219).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…The only exceptions are the earliest centuries (c. 8500-8300 cal BP) in areas such as the Atlantic-European, the LusitanoAndalusian, and the Central Iberian, which fall outside the 95 % confidence level (2σ) of the null hypothesis and thus diverge statistically from the expected pattern. This observation, previously noted (Fano et al 2015), is in line with the scarce number of radiocarbon dates in the Mediterranean basin recognizable in similar chronologies (Berger and Guilaine 2009) and is to be regarded within regular oscillations in radiocalibrated 14 C trends during the Iberian Mesolithic (Bernabeu Aubán et al 2014, pp. 217-219).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…However, a substantial degree of subregional variability during the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in Iberia has also been spotlighted (Bernabeu Aubán et al 2014, p. 223;Balsera et al 2015a, p. 154). A case in point is the Cantabrian strip; a recent review of radiocarbon dates suggests diverse spatio-temporal dynamics for the spread of the Neolithic in the fifth millennium cal BC, being quicker in its eastern sector (Fano et al 2015;Cubas et al 2016). As a way to evaluate such claims, this paper examines inter-regional dynamics in Iberia deploying alternative analytical units at larger scales.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This situation changes radically in the fourth millennium cal BC, when the expansion of megalithic structures throughout the whole region signified the introduction of a new funerary ritual. The first open-air settlements (Las Corvas, L'Hortal and La Calvera) possibly appeared at the same time (their chronology is based on radiocarbon dates obtained from wood charcoal of unidentified species and might thus be artificially older: Fano et al 2015).…”
Section: Discussion: Influences On the Neolithic In Northern Spainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Como el objetivo central de estos trabajos ha sido detectar, valorar y comparar la huella paisajística de las actividades humanas en ambas regiones, se ha considerado necesario abarcar todo el periodo de tiempo comprendido desde el Neolítico, momento en el que aparecen las primeras actividades agrarias hace aproximadamente 7000 años (Fano et al, 2015), hasta la actualidad. Para ello, y dado que se ha tratado de obtener los datos más precisos posibles para cada momento de la historia, ha sido necesario recurrir de manera complementaria pero coordinada a fuentes de información muy diversas, propias tanto de las Ciencias de la Tierra y de la Naturaleza como de las Humanidades y de las Ciencias Sociales.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified