Abstract: The subsistence of hunter-gatherer-fisher groups during the Mesolithic in the Cantabrian coast is characterized by a wide diversity of exploited resources, including mammals (marine and terrestrial), birds, fishes, marine molluscs, crustaceans and echinoderms, but above all it is remarkable the intensification in the exploitation of some of these resources, such as the marine molluscs, in parallel to particular changes in the exploitation of terrestrial mammals, specifically ungulates. Recent excavations in the shell midden of El Mazo cave (Asturias), with a continuous stratigraphic sequence that covers most of the the regional Mesolithic (8.9 to 7.6 cal ka), have provided a significant amount of biological remains. Here, the archeozoological and taphonomic study of the macromammal remains from the stratigraphic units 100 to 107 is presented. The results show the palaeoconomic decisions adopted by those human groups, their diet and exploitation of different ecological environments, seasonality of the occupations and, also, reveal the different biostratinomic and diagenetic alterations that took part during the formation of the shell midden.
Fuente: Saguntum-Extra, 2020, 21, 277-290
Editorial: Universidad de Valencia, Departamento de Prehistoria y Arqueología
Año de publicación: 2020
Nº de páginas: 14
Tipo de publicación: Artículo de Revista
ISSN: 2254-0512,2253-7295
Proyecto español: HAR2013-46802-P
Url de la publicación: https://turia.uv.es/index.php/saguntumextra/article/view/19244