10 results on '"Bennàsar, Maria"'
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2. Biostratigraphy, palaeogeography and palaeoenvironmental significance of Sorex runtonensis Hinton, 1911 (Mammalia, Soricidae): First record from the Iberian Peninsula
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Rofes, Juan, Moya-Costa, Raquel, Bennàsar, Maria, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, and Cuenca-Bescós, Gloria
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- 2016
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3. Palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic reconstruction of the Latest Pleistocene of L’Arbreda Cave (Serinyà, Girona, northeastern Iberia) inferred from the small-mammal (insectivore and rodent) assemblages
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López-García, Juan Manuel, Soler, Narcís, Maroto, Julià, Soler, Joaquim, Alcalde, Gabriel, Galobart, Àngel, Bennàsar, Maria, and Burjachs, Francesc
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- 2015
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4. Last Neanderthals and first Anatomically Modern Humans in the NW Iberian Peninsula: Climatic and environmental conditions inferred from the Cova Eirós small-vertebrate assemblage during MIS 3.
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Rey-Rodríguez, Iván, López-García, Juan-Manuel, Bennàsar, Maria, Bañuls-Cardona, Sandra, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, Blanco-Lapaz, Ángel, Rodríguez-Álvarez, Xosé-Pedro, de Lombera-Hermida, Arturo, Díaz-Rodríguez, Mikel, Ameijenda-Iglesias, Alicia, Agustí, Jordi, and Fábregas-Valcarce, Ramón
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NEANDERTHALS , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *VERTEBRATES , *HABITATS , *BIOCLIMATOLOGY , *HUMAN-Neanderthal encounters - Abstract
Cova Eirós is emerging as a reference site in the northwestern Iberian Peninsula for the study of the development of the last Neanderthal populations and the first populations of Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) in MIS 3. Cova Eirós is an archaeological site (with Middle and Upper Palaeolithic levels) located in Cancelo, Triacastela (Lugo, northwestern Iberian Peninsula), which has been systematically excavated from 2008 onwards. The small-vertebrate assemblage analysed came from the archaeo-palaeontological field seasons that took place from 2009 to 2014. At least 18 small-vertebrate taxa have been identified: 1 frog ( Rana temporaria ), 1 snake ( Vipera sp.), 4 insectivores ( Sorex minutus , Sorex sp., Talpa cf. occidentalis and Erinaceus europaeus ), 4 chiropters ( Myotis myotis/blythii , cf. Miniopterus sp., Myotis sp. and Rhinolophus ferrumequinum ) and 8 rodents ( Apodemus sylvaticus , Arvicola amphibius , Arvicola sapidus , Chionomys nivalis , Microtus (Terricola) lusitanicus , Microtus agrestis , Microtus arvalis and Microtus oeconomus ). Using the Habitat Weighting method to reconstruct the palaeoenvironment, we reconstruct a landscape for MIS 3 characterized by open woodland formations. The Mutual Ecogeographic Range (MER) method and the Bioclimatic Model (BM) used for the palaeoclimatic reconstruction show lower temperatures and higher precipitation than at present in the region. Our results from Cova Eirós are compared with the data obtained from several other sites in the Iberian Peninsula; it can be said that Neanderthals and AMH were well adapted to the territory that they occupied, as well as to the surrounding environment and the climatic conditions prevalent in the unstable context of MIS 3 in the Iberian Peninsula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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5. Environmental and climatic context of Neanderthal occupation in southwestern Europe during MIS3 inferred from the small-vertebrate assemblages.
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López-García, Juan Manuel, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, Bennàsar, Maria, and Fernández-García, Mónica
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NEANDERTHALS , *HABITATS , *ARID regions , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *VERTEBRATES - Abstract
Abstract: According to pollen analysis, Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS3, ca. 60–30 ka) is characterized in southern Europe by dynamic alternations of forest vs. semi-arid area expansion in accordance with the warming and cooling, respectively, of the sea-surface temperatures. It is in this context of rapid fluctuations that the Neanderthal occupation of the northeastern Iberian Peninsula took place. This paper sets forth a synthesis of the previously published environmental and climatic data obtained from the small vertebrates (herpetofauna and small mammals) of the Neanderthal localities of Cova del Gegant, Abric Romani, l'Arbreda cave, Canyars and Teixoneres. Using habitat weighting and mutual climatic range methods to reconstruct the environment, temperature and rainfall, the Middle Paleolithic occupations in northeastern Iberia are closely related to the presence of woodlands, irrespective of the climatic conditions. However, there are differences in the percentage of forest formations from the south to the northeast of Iberia. Southern Iberia (Gorham's cave) was much more forested than the northern parts (A. Romaní, l'Arbreda, Canyars, Teixoneres, C. Gegant). This observation coincides with the status of the southernmost Iberian Peninsula as a climatic refuge, where Neanderthals survived until ca. 28 ka BP. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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6. Unravelling the oxygen isotope signal (δ18O) of rodent teeth from northeastern Iberia, and implications for past climate reconstructions.
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Fernández-García, Mónica, Royer, Aurélien, López-García, Juan Manuel, Bennàsar, Maria, Goedert, Jean, Fourel, François, Julien, Marie-Anne, Bañuls-Cardona, Sandra, Rodríguez-Hidalgo, Antonio, Vallverdú, Josep, and Lécuyer, Christophe
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OXYGEN isotopes , *RODENTS , *DENTAL enamel , *CLIMATE change , *ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *TEETH - Abstract
Small mammals, especially rodents, constitute valuable proxies for continental Quaternary environments at a regional and local scale. Recent studies have demonstrated the relation between the stable oxygen isotope composition of the biogenic phosphate from rodent teeth (δ18O p), and the oxygen isotope composition of meteoric waters (δ18O mw), which is related to air temperatures at mid and high latitudes. This work explores the δ18O p of rodent tooth enamel (from Murinae and Arvicolinae subfamilies) to investigate the palaeoenvironmental conditions in northeastern Iberia during Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3; ca. 60-30 ka). Fourteen new δ18O p analyses from modern samples in conjunction with forty-six δ18O p analyses previously published are used to decipher the isotope record of present-day rodent teeth in this region. Two main factors should be considered in Iberian palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: the singular nature of Iberian δ18O mw records and the potential seasonality bias of small-mammal accumulation. Methodological proposals are made with a view to ensuring the correct interpretation of the δ18O p of small mammals in reconstructing past air temperatures. This methodology is applied to the MIS 3 sequence of the Cova dels Xaragalls site (Vimbodí-Poblet, Tarragona, Spain), where fifty-one δ18O analyses were performed on wood mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus) lower incisors. A spring-early summer accumulation of small mammals is suggested for the layers at Cova dels Xaragalls. In agreement with previous environmental studies of the site, variations in the δ18O p values suggest slight fluctuations in the climatic conditions throughout the sequence, which are consistent with the stadial-interstadial alternations that characterized MIS 3. Complementary palaeoenvironmental methods determine cooler conditions than nowadays, but within a globally stable climatic period. • Oxygen isotopes analyses on rodent contributes to continental environment knowledge. • Iberia requires a specific regional equation for past temperatures estimation. • Prey-predator interactions influence oxygen isotope temporal information recorded. • Seasonality bias and Iberian context are considered in the methodological proposal. • Complementary palaeoenvironmental methods yielded matching results at Xaragalls cave. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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7. The Middle Pleistocene site of La Cansaladeta (Tarragona, Spain): Stratigraphic and archaeological succession.
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Ollé, Andreu, Vergès, Josep Maria, Rodríguez-Álvarez, Xosé Pedro, Cáceres, Isabel, Angelucci, Diego E., Vallverdú, Josep, Demuro, Martina, Arnold, Lee J., Falguères, Christophe, Bennàsar, Maria, López-García, Juan Manuel, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, Bañuls-Cardona, Sandra, Burjachs, Francesc, Expósito, Isabel, López-Polín, Lucía, and López-Ortega, Esther
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PLEISTOCENE Epoch , *BIOSTRATIGRAPHY , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *PALEOPEDOLOGY - Abstract
La Cansaladeta is a site located in a narrow passage dug out by the Francolí River in the Pre-littoral Catalan range (NE Iberia). The archaeological deposit lies on top of a +45–50 m fluvial terrace, and contains a rich Middle Pleistocene stratigraphic succession in which 10 archaeological layers have been identified. Here, we present the description of the sedimentary succession of the site, the available chronological framework (including TL, TT-OSL, and ESR/U series ages, as well as biostratigraphical information), the characteristics of the lithotechnical and faunal assemblages, as well as the first interpretation of the human occupations at the site. Three main occupation phases have been differentiated. The oldest archaeological layers are embedded in a palaeosol formed on a clayey layer that contains limestone fragments detached from the shelter's wall and roof. During the second phase, low energy fluvial sediments coming from lateral river floods were deposited and sealed the archaeological layers. After a transitional phase, the upper layers appear to be derived from slope sediments. Numerical dating yielded internally consistent dates of 380–400 ka for the sequence. However, the study of the fossil assemblages potentially suggest a tentative early Middle Pleistocene age for the lowermost horizons. The rich technological record is made up of several local raw materials, especially chert but also schist, quartzite, quartz and other minor rocks. Knapping sequences seem to be autochthonous, as all the elements and size-categories of the reduction sequence are present, and refits are common. Techno-typological features observed along the sequence are not very diagnostic, however the lower layers include some Acheulean forms among the large shaped tools, restricted variability among the small retouched tools (mostly denticulates) and a virtually absence of prepared cores. The faunal assemblage is scarce and appears strongly altered. Only the lower layers have provided fruitful information. Although neither combustion areas nor structures related to fire-use have been documented to date, heat damage has been repeatedly recorded on both lithic and faunal remains. This may point to systematic fire use within the archaeological sequence. The data provided by the ongoing excavations at La Cansaladeta provide new insight into the early human settlement history of northeast Iberia to be reconstructed. Combining these data with those coming from the close site of Barranc de la Boella, enable us to better reconstruct the timing, nature and context of early human occupation in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. Successful subsistence strategies of the first humans in south-western Europe
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Huguet, Rosa, Saladié, Palmira, Cáceres, Isabel, Díez, Carlos, Rosell, Jordi, Bennàsar, Maria, Blasco, Ruth, Esteban-Nadal, Montserrat, Gabucio, Maria Joana, Rodríguez-Hidalgo, Antonio, and Carbonell, Eudald
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HOMINIDS , *PLEISTOCENE Epoch , *HUMAN settlements , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Abstract: Subsistence strategies are a set of actions and measures chosen by hominins in a specific place and at a specific time to obtain the means necessary to survive and reproduce as individuals and as a group. Choosing successful actions and measures increases the group''s means of survival, which in turn gives rise to an increase in population, thereby ensuring the continuity of the group. Some authors believe that Early Pleistocene hominin settlements were marginal and discontinuous due to their lack of social networks and cultural acquirements. However, the faunal remains recovered in the caves of Gran Dolina (levels 3–4 and 6) and Sima del Elefante (levels 9–14) in the Sierra de Atapuerca (Spain) show that the subsistence strategies of Early Pleistocene hominins in Europe were successful enough to allow hominin groups to survive and reproduce in sufficient numbers. Therefore, these first humans would have the ability to maintain a continuous occupation of Europe. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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9. Palaeoecology of Neanderthals during Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles in northeastern Iberia (Abric Romaní): From regional to global scale
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Burjachs, Francesc, López-García, Juan Manuel, Allué, Ethel, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, Rivals, Florent, Bennàsar, Maria, and Expósito, Isabel
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PALEOECOLOGY , *NEANDERTHALS , *CLIMATE change , *PALYNOLOGY , *AMPHIBIANS , *ANTHRACOLOGY , *PINE , *GRASSLANDS - Abstract
Abstract: The sequence from Abric Romaní has provided several palaeoecological studies. This paper presents a synthesis of the results yielded by palynology, including the data from the entire non-excavated deposits, and the data obtained through the study of large mammals, micromammals, herpetofauna, and anthracology from the excavated layers. The palaeobotanical studies show that the sequence is mainly related to pine forests, and near or within these dominant forests there were smaller plant formations and/or secondary species with a Mediterranean and/or Atlantic character. Nevertheless, continuous forest did not dominate the entire region. The fauna occupying the territory indicate open spaces in which seasonal grasslands proliferated, dry assemblages in sunny areas and humid ones in mountain shadows. The non-excavated archaeological layers correspond to MIS 4, initially characterized by temperate and humid conditions, and thereafter cool and humid until HS 6 and MIS 3. Afterwards, at the beginning of the MIS 3, the Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles, ∼1500 yr rapid and abrupt climatic changes, occurred during the deposition of the archaeological levels O, N, M, L, K and J. Later, these events were interrupted by a cold and dry phase, between ca 49 and 47 ka BP, which affected levels Ja, I and H, culminating with HS 5. Finally, this cold episode was followed by the Hengelo interstadial or DO 12, characterized by a temperate and humid climate identified in levels E and D. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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10. Climate and environment of the earliest West European hominins inferred from amphibian and squamate reptile assemblages: Sima del Elefante Lower Red Unit, Atapuerca, Spain
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Blain, Hugues-Alexandre, Bailon, Salvador, Cuenca-Bescós, Gloria, Bennàsar, Maria, Rofes, Juan, López-García, Juan Manuel, Huguet, Rosa, Arsuaga, Juan Luis, Bermúdez de Castro, José Maria, and Carbonell, Eudald
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CLIMATOLOGY , *AMPHIBIANS , *SQUAMATA , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL finds , *BIOSTRATIGRAPHY , *NUCLEAR activation analysis , *LANDSCAPES - Abstract
Abstract: The Sima del Elefante cave, in the Sierra de Atapuerca (Burgos, Spain), is famous for the fact that level TE9 of its Lower Red Unit recently delivered the oldest hominin remains of Western Europe, identified as Homo antecessor and dated by biostratigraphy and radiometric methods to ca 1.2Ma. Given the importance of this discovery, every effort is being made to reconstruct the landscapes where these hominins once thrived. The amphibian and squamate reptile assemblage of the Sima del Elefante Lower Red Unit is here studied for the first time. The faunal list comprises at least 17 species (roughly 12,000 bone fossil remains): Salamandra salamandra, Triturus cf. marmoratus, Alytes obstetricans, Pelobates cultripes, Pelodytes punctatus, Bufo bufo, Bufo calamita, Hyla arborea, Rana sp., cf. Pelophylax sp., Lacerta s.l., small-sized indeterminate lacertids, Anguis fragilis, Natrix cf. natrix, Natrix cf. maura, Coronella cf. girondica and Vipera sp. As the amphibians and squamate reptiles do not differ at species level from the extant herpetofauna of the Iberian Peninsula, they can contribute to the reconstruction of the landscape and climate. In this paper, the mutual climatic range and habitat weighting methods are applied to the amphibian and squamate reptile assemblages in order to estimate quantitative data. The results from the squamate and amphibian study indicate that during the hominin presence the mean annual temperature (MAT=10–13°C) was always slightly warmer than at present and the mean annual precipitation (MAP=800–1000mm) was greater than today in the Burgos area. The landscape had open habitats in the vicinity of the Atapuerca caves throughout the sequence, with wet points in the surrounding area, and a predominance of humid meadows and open woodlands. These results mainly agree with those for large mammals, small mammals and the pollen analysis. The climate and landscape of TE-LRU are very similar to those reconstructed for the TD6 “Aurora Stratum” level of the Gran Dolina cave (Atapuerca) that has yielded H. antecessor remains at ca 960ky. When compared with Orce localities of similar age (i.e. Barranco León D and Fuente Nueva 3) that have yielded strong evidence of hominin presence (mainly lithic industries), it appears that they have a fairly similar environmental pattern, having in common a good representation of woodland and water-edge areas, even though dry environments are more developed in Barranco León D and Fuente Nueva 3 than in Sima del Elefante and Gran Dolina. H. antecessor may have thus lived under a warm-humid climate in a patchy landscape mainly composed of humid meadows and riparian woodlands. Such a landscape may have provided favourable conditions for a high diversity of large mammals, as well as for hiding and escaping from large carnivores. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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