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Multi-Isotope investigations of ungulate bones and teeth from El Castillo and Covalejos caves (Cantabria, Spain): Implications for paleoenvironment reconstructions across the Middle-Upper Palaeolithic transition

Abstract: The Cantabrian region of Northern Spain was an important area of human occupation during the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic as the rich archaeological record demonstrates. The environmental conditions experienced by late Neanderthals and Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in the region during MIS3 are still poorly known, but are crucial to understand the role climatic instability could have had on the adaptations of these populations. In this study, a series of archaeological levels with Mousterian and Aurignacian artefact assemblages, dating between 49 and 35 ka uncal. BP, from the sites of El Castillo and Covalejos caves in Cantabria were studied using multi-isotope techniques including bone collagen ?13C, ?15N and ?34S analysis and a pilot study based on tooth enamel ?18O and ?13C. Results at Covalejos indicate a large range in ?15N values observable within both Mousterian Level D and Aurignacian Level B, suggesting the presence of different micro-environments within the local area at certain times during each temporal period. Within Aurignacian Level C and Mousterian Level J, the ?15N values range is much smaller, but shows consistency in the parts of the landscape being exploited during both times. Neanderthals and AMH appear to have been procuring animals from isotopically similar zones (isozones) when they occupied Covalejos. The variations in ?34S values between levels analysed at Covalejos also implies the use of a variety of hunting locations by both late Neanderthals and AMH. At El Castillo, ?13C and ?15N values show great consistency between levels, indicating that animals were being hunted from the same isozones when the site was presumably occupied by the two human species. The mosaic landscapes of Cantabria may have buffered the sharp environmental fluctuations that occurred during late MIS3 throughout Europe, providing suitable habitats for the key prey ungulate species that were routinely exploited throughout the Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic. This environmental buffering may explain why this southerly, oceanic region was consistently occupied throughout this time of bio-cultural transition.

Otras publicaciones de la misma revista o congreso con autores/as de la Universidad de Cantabria

 Autoría: Jones, J.R., Richards, M.P., Reade, H., Bernaldo de Quirós, F., Marín-Arroyo, A.B.

 Fuente: Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 23 (2019), 1029-1042

Editorial: Elsevier

 Año de publicación: 2019

Nº de páginas: 14

Tipo de publicación: Artículo de Revista

 DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2018.04.014

ISSN: 2352-409X,2352-4103

 Proyecto español: HAR2012-33956 and Ramon y Cajal-2011- 00695

 Proyecto europeo: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/322112/EU/HUMAN SUBSISTENCE AND CLIMATE CHANGE IN EUROPEAN REFUGIA: LATE NEANDERTHALS AND EARLY MODERN/EUROREFUGIA/

Url de la publicación: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2018.04.014

Autoría

JENNIFER ROSE JONES

RICHARDS, MICHAEL P.

READE, HAZEL

BERNALDO DE QUIRÓS, FEDERICO