33 results
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2. Nonadult vertebral maturation in Late Holocene hunter‐gatherers from Patagonia (Salitroso Lake, Argentina).
- Author
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Morlesin, Milena C., Guichón Fernández, Rocío, and García Guraieb, Solana
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HUNTER-gatherer societies , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *STATURE , *BONE growth , *SEXUAL dimorphism , *LAKES - Abstract
Bioarchaeological research of bone growth patterns provides information on the health status and disease of past populations. Recent studies have pointed out the potential of metric analysis of nonadult vertebrae as indicators of stress during different stages of ontogeny, highlighting that most vertebral measurements present low sexual dimorphism, a stable and known pattern of growth and give useful information even in incomplete spines. The aims of this paper are first, to construct a vertebral growth profile for nonadults of a skeletal series of Patagonian Late Holocene hunter‐gatherers from Salitroso Lake (SAC); second, to compare it to the ones obtained in other archaeological and modern populations with different stress experiences; and third, building on this, to assess whether individuals with evidence of stress experienced in early development demonstrate different patterns in vertebral growth than those without. Two spinal dimensions are used: vertebral body height (VBH) and transverse diameter of the neural canal (TDNC) in a sample of 23 nonadult skeletons with ages previously estimated from dental and bone indicators. The vertebral dimensions of 20 adults between 18 and 35 years of age were also measured as reference information. Results show that the growth of the VBH is steady over the years and reaches adulthood size by approximately 16 years of age whereas TDNC dimensions do not experience marked fluctuations in size throughout life and adult dimensions are reached at approximately 4 years of age as expected. The vertebral growth pattern observed in SAC is similar to that obtained in other archaeological samples from very different settings but experiencing relatively high nutritional or pathological stress in early stages of life. However, it is markedly different, and systematically smaller, to the 20th century sample pattern, probably responding to a secular trend in the modern population with a more stable access to resources and medical treatment. Finally, SAC individuals with systemic stress markers do not tend to exhibit smaller vertebral dimensions than those without them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Petrographic study of the pottery of hunter–gatherers from the lower basin of the Colorado river (Argentina) during the Late Holocene.
- Author
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Borges Vaz, Erika and Pereyra Domingorena, Lucas
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *POTTERY , *WATERSHEDS , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *GEOLOGICAL research - Abstract
This paper presents the first petrographic study of pottery made by hunter–gatherer societies that inhabited the eastern Pampa–Patagonia transition regions (Buenos Aires province, Argentina), between c.1900 and 400 radiocarbon‐years bp. The data show that the potters maintained technical choices during this period as part of a technological tradition. With this common knowledge, local fabric recipes coexisted linked to the regularity of the use of raw materials in accordance with the geology of the research area. Furthermore, the finding of archaeological clay doughs would indicate the in situ production of vessels in the residential contexts of these pre‐Hispanic populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Wood resource exploitation by Late Holocene occupations in central Argentina: Fire making in rockshelters of the ongamira valley (Córdoba, Argentina).
- Author
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Robledo, Andrés
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RESOURCE exploitation , *CAVES , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *FOREST plants , *FORESTS & forestry , *FUELWOOD , *TAPHONOMY - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a study of firewood use and management by human groups in the Ongamira valley, Córdoba, Argentina (dated between c. 5700-950 BP). In order to understand firewood gathering practices at different periods in the Late Holocene, samples from 63 combustion events recorded in 9 rockshelters were analysed. From the anthracological analysis (14,976 fragments) 19 woody taxa, and 4 botanically indeterminate taxa, were identified belonging to Chaco Serrano forest vegetation. The identification of abundant small flat fireplaces suggests short-lived activities repeated over time. A detailed analysis of the samples (types of fire pits, alterations during combustion and taphonomic processes) permits inferring firewood gathering in the local vegetation around the sites, as well as some taxa belonging to different environmental settings. Archaeological evidence indicates that groups were mobile, with the establishment of a network of places in the landscape where different activities were carried out (tool production, food consumption and pottery manufacture) with fire making as a central activity. People in the past constantly used different places in the valley, focusing many of their activities in rockshelters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. ARQUEOLOGÍA DE LA LAGUNA SAUCE GRANDE (PARTIDO DE MONTE HERMOSO, PROVINCIA DE BUENOS AIRES).
- Author
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Frontini, Romina, Vecchi, Rodrigo, Bayón, Cristina, and Fiori, Sandra
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HUNTER-gatherer societies , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *ADULTS , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *HOMOGENEITY , *BIVALVES - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to provide new data about prehispanic occupations in the vicinity of the Sauce Grande shallow lake (Monte Hermoso, province of Buenos Aires). The results of the research about the Laguna Sauce Grande II and Laguna Sauce Grande III archaeological sites are presented. Furthermore, the subsistence, technology and mobility of hunter-gatherers during the late Holocene are discussed. In relation to subsistence, the abundant record of Amarilladesma mactroides (yellow clam) remains is a remarkable fact, which indicates that this bivalve was transported for 6 km from the Atlantic coast and used as foodstuff. The estimated size of the shells retrieved demonstrates homogeneity in selecting adult individuals. In regard to technology, 12 different rock varieties from diverse sources were identified, which means there were various transportation distance ranges involved. The artifacts were produced by knapping and by picking; those intended to resource processing are predominant. The material evidence, particularly that of archaeofaunae, presents novel information for the Pampean region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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6. LATE HOLOCENE BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA OF THE ROMAN LACUS LIGUSTINUS (SW SPAIN): A PALEOENVIRONMENTAL APPROACH.
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GUERRA, LILIANA, VEIGA-PIRES, CRISTINA, GONZALEZ-REGALADO, MARIA LUZ, ABAD, MANUEL, TOSCANO, ANTONIO, MUÑOZ, JUAN MANUEL, RUIZ, FRANCISCO, RODRÍGUEZ VIDAL, JOAQUÍN, CÁCERES, LUIS MIGUEL, IZQUIERDO, TATIANA, CARRETERO, MARÍA ISABEL, POZO, MANUEL, MONGE, GUADALUPE, TOSQUELLA, JOSEP, PRUDENCIO, MARÍA ISABEL, DIAS, MARÍA ISABEL, MARQUES, ROSA, GÓMEZ, PAULA, and ROMERO, VERÓNICA
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FORAMINIFERA , *ELPHIDIUM , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *BENTHIC ecology , *SEDIMENTS , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
This paper studies the Late Holocene benthic foraminifera from a continuous core extracted in the Doñana National Park (SW Spain). In this core, the foraminiferal assemblages confirm the Late Holocene lagoon (historically so-called Lacus Ligustinus) during the Roman period, about 2000 years ago. The more open, deepest areas of this lagoon were dominated by Ammonia tepida and Elphidium spp., while Haynesina germanica was the most representative species of the shallow, more restricted zones. The vertical variations of these assemblages, together with associated sedimentological and macrofaunal changes, allow recognizing three high-energy events (HEE) between 500 BCE and 500 CE, which also left an extensive sedimentary record in nearby coastal areas: two tsunamis (HEE-1 and HEE-3) and a storminess period (HEE-2). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. Climatic change and human-marine interactions in the uttermost tip of South America in Late Holocene.
- Author
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Álvarez, Myrian, Briz i Godino, Ivan, Pal, Nélida, Bas, Maria, and Lacrouts, Adriana
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CLIMATE change , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *LITTLE Ice Age , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages , *LAND settlement patterns , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL dating - Abstract
Palaeoclimatic records from southern tip of South America during the Last Holocene, indicate important climate intervals, such as the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age, which offered new scenarios to hunter-gatherer groups who inhabited the region. The aim of this paper is to explore the social practices carried out by hunter-fisher-gatherer societies of the southern part of the Atlantic Coast of Tierra del Fuego island (53–55°S, 66–74°W) in order to deal with these environmental changes. From our perspective, foragers have played an active role in designing strategies to cope with environmental fluctuations. Consequently, we argue that in a context of ecological uncertainty, these societies would have developed flexible strategies in terms of subsistence, technology and settlement patterns. In order to test this proposal, zooarchaeological and technological analysis of different archaeological assemblages dated between the 1300 to 220 BP were undertaken. The results show that these hunter-fisher-gatherer societies exploited a broad range of faunal resources using a versatile technology which encompassed tools with low production values and high use values. Likewise, the analysis of landscape organization revealed a settlement strategy centered on the most productive habitats, which were preferentially reoccupied. We suggest that these strategies, supported by cumulative knowledge and material conditions, could have enhanced social resilience and sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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8. Late-Holocene coastal depositional environments and climate changes in the Gulf of Corinth, Greece.
- Author
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Emmanouilidis, Alexandros, Unkel, Ingmar, Triantaphyllou, Maria, and Avramidis, Pavlos
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CLIMATE change , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *ALLUVIUM , *X-ray fluorescence , *URBAN planning , *MORPHOTECTONICS - Abstract
Multidisciplinary studies in coastal systems of the eastern Mediterranean region have proven to be excellent tools in understanding paleoenvironmental, paleoecological, and paleoclimatic changes that took place during the Holocene period, and how these changes interacted with urban development and growth. This paper presents sedimentological, high-resolution x-ray fluorescence (XRF scanning), micropaleontological, and x-ray diffraction (XRD) data from three shallow sediment cores that were retrieved from Aliki (ancient Siphai or Tipha) salt pond. The study area is located in a unique, highly tectonic geographical region, at the northeast part of the Gulf of Corinth in Greece. Beachrock deposits that form a barrier between the salt pond and the marine environment seem to play an important role in the evolution of the area. The chronological framework was set at around 3100 cal. BP by four 14C radiocarbon dates, and the evolutionary model that was established indicates four different changes taking place during this period at the study area. From around 3100 to 1600 cal. BP, a transition from a closed to an open lagoonal environment was identified, interrupted by a fluvial terrestrial deposit at around 2500 cal. BP. A shift toward a closed lagoonal system at around 1600 cal. BP and the establishment of a salt pond environment seem to correlate with tectonic activity. The study provides important information about the evolution of coastal landscape in such a tectonic active region and points the interaction between regional human activity and climatic changes during the late-Holocene period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Late Holocene vegetation and climate change in the northern Tibetan Plateau region based on a palynological analysis from Lake Ayakum.
- Author
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Qi, Chang, Wang, Yongbo, Liu, Xingqi, Ni, Zhenyu, and Cui, Kai
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VEGETATION dynamics , *FOSSIL pollen , *NORTH Atlantic oscillation , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *POLLEN , *LITTLE Ice Age , *CYPERUS , *CHENOPODIACEAE - Abstract
In this paper, we undertake a high-resolution palynological analysis of a sediment core covering the last 1500 years obtained from Lake Ayakum in the northern Tibetan Plateau, to improve the understanding of regional climate fluctuations and their driving mechanisms. The pollen spectra are dominated by herbaceous species such as Artemisia , Chenopodiaceae, Cyperaceae and Poaceae, which grew in various alpine desert settings. Four pollen assemblage zones are identified using stratigraphically constrained cluster analysis, representing climate history at different stages. The Artemisia /Chenopodiaceae (A/C) ratio and axis score of the first principal component are used to infer regional moisture conditions and reveal a temporal pattern that is consistent with various records from central Asia. The source of Cyperaceae pollen is mainly from marsh wetlands distributed around the lake, which responded sensitively to the lake level fluctuations. In contrast, arboreal pollen is mainly a long-distance transported component, reflecting changes in regional vegetation. Our findings show that the northern Tibetan Plateau experienced relatively wet conditions during the Dark Age Cold Period and the Little Ice Age, while relatively dry conditions occurred during the Medieval Warm Period and the last two centuries. Fluctuations in moisture levels are broadly consistent with moisture records elsewhere in western China, and show a good correlation with phase changes of the North Atlantic Oscillation. The climate changes in the northern Tibetan Plateau are supposed to be primarily triggered by the NAO phases through south-north migrations of the mid-latitude westerlies during the late Holocene. • Fossil pollen based 1500-year vegetation and climate changes on the northern Tibetan Plateau. • Major pollen species were analyzed and interpreted in terms of regional moisture variations. • Four vegetation and climate stages during the late Holocene were determined accordingly. • NAO phases affected northern TP climate through south-north migrations of the westerlies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Diatom evidence for late Holocene environmental change in a permafrost peatland in the northern Greater Khingan Mountains, Northeast China.
- Author
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Han, Dongxue, Sun, Yang, Yu, Zicheng, Jiang, Ming, Cong, Jinxin, Gao, Chuanyu, and Wang, Guoping
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DIATOMS , *FOSSIL diatoms , *PERMAFROST , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *CLIMATE change , *GLOBAL warming , *SPECIES diversity - Abstract
High-latitude permafrost peatlands are sensitive to global warming, and understanding their paleohydrological evolution is critical for assessing future hydrological and environmental changes. This paper presents a diatom record from a peat deposit covering the past 3300 years to reconstruct the moisture and acidity conditions in the Tuqiang permafrost peatland in the northern Greater Khingan Mountains of northeast China. Our findings are integrated with previously published records of plant macrofossils, palynology, and geochemistry from the same profile. From 3300 to 2800 cal yr BP, planktonic and benthic diatoms were equally abundant, indicating relatively high moisture conditions, while the low abundance of acidophilous diatoms reflects relatively high pH during this interval. Pollen data show dominance by sedges with input from the surrounding Pinus forest, while LOI data and lithology suggest that the site was a non-peat accumulating wetland. During the period 2800–1100 cal yr BP, the dominance of planktonic diatoms indicates a wetter local environment, concurrent with the dominance of peat-forming sedges (Eriophorum), indicating the development of a peatland. Between 1100 and 500 cal yr BP, a short-lived increase in acidophilous diatoms (Eunotia) marks a decrease in pH. Since 500 cal yr BP, the dominance of benthic diatoms reflects a drier environment, while a vegetation shift from an Eriophorum -dominated rich fen to a Sphagnum- and Ericaceae-dominated poor fen. An increase in Eunotia diatoms prior to the Sphagnum peak may indicate that diatoms are more sensitive to local acidified habitats than moss. Peatland development in the northern Greater Khingan Mountains was likely induced by the onset of a cooler and wetter climate starting at approximately 2800 cal yr BP, a scenario supported by regional paleoclimate records. Since 700 cal yr BP, the peatland has been affected by both anthropogenic activities and climatic changes, as a drying climate and intensified human activities around the study area reduced diatom species diversity and peat accumulation. Under the background of future global warming and enhanced human activities, the decreasing species diversity and carbon accumulation rate of peatlands in high-latitude permafrost regions need more attention. • Diatoms can indicate local moisture and acidity in permafrost peatlands. • Diatoms are likely more sensitive to microhabitats than bryophytes. • TQ peatland formed after 2800 cal yr BP caused by the cooler and wetter climate. • Rich-fen shifted to poor-fen which co-influenced by deforestation and dry climate at LIA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Stable isotope ecology and human palaeodiet in the northern coast of Santa Cruz (Argentine Patagonia).
- Author
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Zilio, L., Tessone, A., and Hammond, H.
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STABLE isotopes , *POPULATION , *MARINE resources , *HINTERLAND , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Abstract: The aim of this paper is to provide information on the analysis of stable isotopes obtained from bones of marine and terrestrial fauna used as potential food by hunter‐gatherers on the northern coast of Santa Cruz province (Argentine Patagonia). The results from the isotopic ecology are analysed to contribute to dietary interpretations of the human populations who lived in this area. The mean of terrestrial resources is −19.1‰ ± 1.8‰ and 9.2‰ ± 2.6‰ for δ13C and δ15N, respectively. Meanwhile, marine resources recorded a mean of δ13C −12.5‰ ± 1.2‰ and δ15N of 19.4‰ ± 2.4‰. The analysed human samples come from different types of burials dated mainly in the Late Holocene. The δ13C and δ15N isotopic values on human remains suggest the existence of different diets during the Late Holocene, including people who consumed mainly marine, terrestrial, and mixed proteins, with a range between −18‰ to −10.4‰ and 12.4‰ to 23.4‰ for δ13C and δ15N, respectively. Some of these isotopic values, which indicate marine diets, are the highest recorded for Patagonia. The influence of the marine spray on the terrestrial trophic chains is suggested for the Patagonian Atlantic coast, evidenced by higher values in the δ15N of guanacos from the coast in relation to others studied from the hinterland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Late-Holocene palaeoenvironments of Southern Crimea: Soils, soil-climate relationship and human impact.
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Lisetskii, Fedor N., Stolba, Vladimir F., and Pichura, Vitalii I.
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *SOILS & climate , *LAKE sediments , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology - Abstract
Occupying 4% of Crimea's territory, the sub-Mediterranean landscapes of Southern Crimea stand out for their distinct soil-climatic conditions and record of human activity. This paper presents the results of study of the newly formed and well-dated soils from 21 archaeological sites, making it possible to build a soil chronosequence covering the last 2.3 ka. To study the natural processes on an intra-secular scale, short series of instrumental meteorological observations were extended, based on dendrochronological records, to a total of 160 years, and the time series of solar activity and energy for pedogenesis were correlated. These data are collated with a 4.2-ka Lake Saki varve record, which was re-analysed applying the DFT spectrum analysis method, with three distinct phases in relative secular variations in precipitation being identified. The phase of a relative climatic stability with moderate variations in precipitation (3.2-1.25 ka BP) was followed by the period of increased moisture (from 1.25 ka BP), unparalleled since the Late Bronze Age. Given the decisive role of increased moisture in the climate-controlled energy expenditures for pedogenesis, in the dynamics of vegetation cover and human ways of life, the identification of these periods contributes to a better understanding of soil-climate relationship and cause-and-effect for nonlinear change in the settlement and landscape history of the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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13. Pre-Hispanic settlements in hydrometeorologically susceptible areas during the late Holocene: The Upper Delta of the Paraná River Case.
- Author
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Castiñeira Latorre, Carola, Apolinaire, Eduardo, Blasi, Adriana M., Bonomo, Mariano, Politis, Gustavo, Bastourre, Laura, and Mari, Florencia
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HUMAN settlements , *DELTAS , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *HYDROMETEOROLOGY - Abstract
In this paper, we present the results of the geoarchaeological studies carried out in two archaeological localities of the Upper Delta of the Paraná River (Argentina). The main objective of these studies is to depict the pre-Hispanic strategies involved in the colonization and settlement of southern South America wetlands. Paraná Delta is one of the most conspicuous areas of these lowlands and comprises a large wetland macrosystem. Its current geomorphological configuration was established after the last transgressive mid-Holocene event c. 6000 14C yr BP. In this environment, a high ecological heterogeneity, with diverse and abundant tropical and temperate biota, was developed. These features were important factors to the human colonization and utilization of these wetlands. However, this environment has the highest hydrometeorological susceptibility of La Plata basin. This susceptibility had an impact on settlement systems and resource exploitation strategies established in the area since at least 2000 14C yr BP. These strategies involved at least two settlement types: semi-permanent residential camps and transitory camps oriented to exploit particular resources. The semi-permanent settlements were located in anthropogenic elevated mounds, locally known as 'cerritos', and were not subjected to seasonal inundations. Conversely, the transitory camps are found in levees exposed to recurrent flooding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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14. Late Holocene history of woodland dynamics and wood use in an ancient mining area of the Pyrenees (Ariège, France).
- Author
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Py-Saragaglia, Vanessa, Cunill Artigas, Raquel, Métailié, Jean-Paul, Ancel, Bruno, Baron, Sandrine, Paradis-Grenouillet, Sandrine, Lerigoleur, Émilie, Badache, Nassima, Barcet, Hugues, and Galop, Didier
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CHARCOAL , *SILVER mining , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *MINES & mineral resources , *LAND use - Abstract
This paper focuses on past woodland changes and land uses in an ancient mining area of the Eastern Pyrenees (Ariège, France). The area discussed is located at the western entrance of the Vicdessos, a valley with significant steel production, and it is crossed by the road used from the 14th c. to the end of the 18th c. for the iron-charcoal exchange with the forest Province of Couserans. The introduction of this singular exchange and the silver ore mining history of this border area raise the question of their impact on forest cover changes and changes in human practices and their link with anthropisation processes. To deal with this issue, we put in place an interdisciplinary approach involving archaeology, charcoal analysis, ecological history and geochemistry. The archaeological investigations and fourteen radiocarbon ages allowed characterising and dating of mining and charcoal-making remains. They situate the emergence of metal ore mining during the Second Iron Age and charcoal making activity between the 15th and 17th c. The geochemical analysis of 9 galena samples showed some different isotopic signatures between ores extracted in ancient times and those mined during the modern period. The charcoal analysis of (i) 2442 charcoals from 31 charcoal kilns (ii) 500 from one pedoarchaeological pit excavated in a waste heap related to firesetting, and (iii) 250 from two pedoanthracological sampling points carried out in the charcoal burning forest, permits a detailed reconstruction of the woodland cover changes from the Second Iron Age to the 19th c. Furthermore, the combination of data from different disciplines allows for a long-term reconstruction of human practices history and woodland management for different uses. In particular, the results show the transformation of the fir-beech forest, still dominated by fir around the turn of the Roman era, into pure beech wood managed on northern slopes for human daily needs, occasionally mining, lumber and mainly charcoal production until the 19th c. The elimination of fir dates back to the 17th c. This assumes the end of lumber activities in that period. Pedoanthracological and palynological data suggest that southern slopes, progressively deforested since the Bronze Age, were entirely devoted to permanent agropastoral activities probably at least since the end of the medieval period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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15. Climate and land-use change during the late Holocene at Lake Ledro (southern Alps, Italy).
- Author
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Joannin, Sébastien, Magny, Michel, Peyron, Odile, Vannière, Boris, and Galop, Didier
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CLIMATE change , *LAND use , *SOIL erosion , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *VEGETATION dynamics , *MAGNETIC susceptibility , *LAKES - Abstract
This paper investigates the relative influences of climatic and anthropogenic factors in explaining environmental and societal changes in the southern Alps, Italy. We investigate a deep sediment core (LL081) from Lake Ledro (652 m a.s.l.). Environmental changes are reconstructed through multiproxy analysis, that is, pollen-based vegetation and climate reconstruction, magnetic susceptibility (MS), lake level, and flood frequency, and the paper focuses on the climate and land-use changes which occurred during the late Holocene. For this time interval, Lake Ledro records high mean water table, increasing amount of pollen-based precipitation, and more erosive conditions. Therefore, while a more humid late Holocene in the southern Alps has the potential to reinforce the forest presence, pollen evidence suggests that anthropogenic activities changed the impact of this regional scenario. Land-use activity (forest clearance for pastoralism, farming, and arboriculture) opened up the large vegetated slopes in the catchment of Lake Ledro, which in turn magnified the erosion related to the change in the precipitation pattern. The record of an almost continuous human occupation for the last 4100 cal. BP is divided into several land-use phases. On the one hand, forest redevelopments on abandoned or less cultivated areas appear to be climatically induced as they occurred in relation with well-known events such as the 2.8-kyr cold event and the ‘Little Ice Age’. On the other hand, climatically independent changes in land use or habitat modes are observed, such as the late-Bronze-Age lake-dwellings abandonment, the human population migration at c. 1600 cal. BP, and the period of the Black Death and famines at 600 cal. BP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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16. "A LA LUZ DE LOS DATOS..." DE UN ANÁLISIS ANTRACOLÓGICO EN LA COSTA NORTE DE PATAGONIA (RIO NEGRO).
- Author
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Ortega, Florencia Victoria
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ANTHRACOLOGY , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *PLANT remains (Archaeology) , *CHARCOAL , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
This paper presents the general characteristics of this research aimed to studying the mechanisms used to collect wood by hunter-gatherers, living on the northern shore of San Matías gulf during the last six thousand years. The collected wood was used to build ires where these groups would crack the shells of the collected shellish. This paper also shows a synthesis of the irst results obtained in three archaeological localities. The results obtained through the charcoal analysis will be discussed taking into account the new data available through pollen analysis. The aim is to evaluate the mechanisms applied to the collection of irewood used during the environmental conditions depicted through the palynological techniques. These mechanisms range from a "random gathering" to a thorough "selection" of the wood types according to the properties that make them optimal to be used as fuel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
17. Pollen and fern spores recorded in recent and late Holocene marine sediments from the Indian Ocean and Java Sea in Indonesia.
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Poliakova, Anastasia and Behling, Hermann
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POLLEN , *FERN spores , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *MARINE sediments - Abstract
Fossil pollen and spore diversity in marine sediment cores from the coasts off SW Kalimantan and NE Java (Java Sea) as well as modern pollen assemblages collected off West Java in the SE Indian Ocean in a marine sediment trap are documented in this paper. In total, photographic images of 138 pollen and 41 spores including 14 pollen and 32 unidentified spore types are presented in morphological order. Illustrated pollen and spore taxa list may help pollen and spore identification of future palynological investigations focused on the reconstruction of past vegetation, climate and environment dynamics in SE Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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18. Preliminary zooarchaeological analysis of Dupuy Rockshelter (La Toma, San Luis Province, Argentina): Faunal and paleoenvironmental tendencies related to geoarchaeological and phytoarchaeological evidence.
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Gómez, Gustavo N., Chiesa, Jorge O., and Lalinde, Verónica
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ZOOARCHAEOLOGY , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *PALEOENVIRONMENTAL studies , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
This paper shows the preliminary results of the zooarchaeological analysis of Dupuy Rockshelter (La Toma, San Luis Province, Argentina). This rock shelter has evidence of Late Holocene (Last Millennium) human occupation dating from 340 ± 40 BP. Some species, including Lama guanicoe and Ozotoceros bezoarticus , were exploited and their bones were used as raw material to make instruments. The zooarchaeological analysis is complemented by geological and phytoarchaological evidence which indicates a humid environment during the Holocene and a mixed diet that included vegetables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Ichthyoarcheological investigation at Los Bananos site, alluvial plain of Middle Paraná River (Goya, Corrientes, Argentina).
- Author
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Barboza, María Carolina
- Subjects
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ALLUVIAL plains , *CHRONOLOGY , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *ZOOARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents the analysis of the ichtyoarchaeological record from Los Bananos site (Goya, Corrientes, Argentine). The aim of this study is to render a first evaluation to the role played by fish in subsistence during subsequent occupations of the site. The site is located in the alluvial plain of Middle Paraná River, beside Paraná Miní creek, and it has provided new information about pottery and lithic technology, subsistence, chronology ( 14 C), site formation processes, etc. Bones from Los Bananos have been divided into three assemblages (LB1, LB2 and LB3), according to associated cultural materials. The pre-Hispanic populations that occupied this area by the end of the Late Holocene based their subsistence in hunting, gathering and fishing. Also, the makers of a distinctive ceramic ware associated with LB1 assemblage (related to Goya-Malabrigo entity - lato sensu -), relied on small-scale horticulture. Preceding materials of the other sets (LB2 and LB3) do not present necessary characteristics for cultural association as shown in LB1. The assemblages will be discussed in sequence of their deposition; and compared with results from other related sites. The results of zooarchaeological and taphonomic analysis of the faunal remains suggest that fish was an important resource in LB1. While from LB3 analysis, we will see that fish constituted a complementary resource in the diet. Thus, we can infer that, the role of animals in the diet of the site's prehistoric inhabitants changed during the time deposits were laid. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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20. The first high-resolution stalagmite record from Taiwan: Climate and environmental changes during the past 1300 years.
- Author
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Li, Hong-Chun, Zhao, Min, Tsai, Chia-Hsin, Mii, Horng-Sheng, Chang, Queenie, and Wei, Kuo-Yen
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STALACTITES & stalagmites , *CLIMATE change , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *MONSOONS , *VEGETATION & climate - Abstract
This paper presents the first high-resolution Holocene stalagmite record of Taiwan from Jianfei Cave (22°50.873 N; 120°21.255 E) in Dagangshan Mountain, South Taiwan. The 13.6-cm long stalagmite (DGS-1) has been dated by AMS 14 C dating, spanning from AD 700 to AD 1933. The δ 18 O, δ 13 C and XRF scanned elemental profiles reveal interannual variations in climate and environmental conditions, with light δ 18 O and δ 13 C excursions reflecting wet climate and better vegetation coverage under stronger East Asia Summer Monsoon (EASM). Dark layers in DGS-1 containing high Fe, Mn and Sr contents were formed during dry episodes. Five periods with different climate regimes and vegetation conditions can be identified in the DGS-1 record: Period I (AD 700–1200) and Period V (AD 1810–1933) had warm and wet climates with good vegetation coverage. A drying trend probably corresponding to the switch from El Niño-like to La Niña-like oceanic condition occurred during Period II (AD 1200–1400). Cold but relatively wet climates with good vegetation coverage were prevailed during Period III (AD 1400–1610), whereas cold and dry climates with poor vegetation coverage were dominated during Period IV (AD 1610–1810). Based on the rainfall record of Tainan since AD 1897 and the stalagmite record, we found that stronger total solar irradiation (TSI) resulting in strong EASM produces heavy rainfall in South Taiwan on interannual-to-decadal scales; and vice versa. The 117-yr instrumental rainfall record of Tainan showed that rainfall in Tainan decreased during April-to-June and strongly increased during July-to-September in many La Niña years (positive SOI and negative Niño 3.4). This may be because weaker Meiyu rainfall but stronger tropical Equatorial Pacific cyclones (or typhoon) under La Niña condition. Thus, it is better to use seasonal rainfall for detecting relationship between Tainan rainfall and ENSO. On decadal-to-centennial scales, strong El Niño-like state and warm Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) phase are in favor of wet conditions in South Taiwan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. The Spatial Structure of Lithic Landscapes: the Late Holocene Record of East-Central Argentina as a Case Study.
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Barrientos, Gustavo, Catella, Luciana, and Oliva, Fernando
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LANDSCAPES , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL research , *GEOLOGICAL statistics , *ANTIQUITIES - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to discuss conceptual and methodological issues related with the archaeological study of lithic landscapes and exemplify the approach with a case study (artifact distribution data from east-central Argentina). A lithic landscape-understood as the co-occurrence, in a given geographic space, of different structural units each one composed by a raw material source and the complete set of unmodified and human-modified pieces of rock extracted from that source and then transported, used, and discarded across the landscape ( i.e., a scatter area)-can be modeled using kriging, a geostatistical interpolation tool useful for integrating scattered information into coherent spatial models. The case study allows for the examination and discussion of, on one hand, the relationships between the type and location of the sources and the size and shape of the respective scatter areas and, on the other, the reciprocal relationships between different raw materials and sources. It is concluded that a proper description of the spatial structure of a lithic landscape is the needed baseline from which to evaluate different explanatory models. Such models should take into account different sets of initial conditions and generative mechanisms, in order to cope with the pervasive problem of equifinality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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22. Late Holocene peatland palm swamp (aguajal) development, carbon deposition and environment changes in the Madre de Dios region, southeastern Peru.
- Author
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Wang, Bowen, Hapsari, Kartika Anggi, Horna, Viviana, Zimmermann, Reiner, and Behling, Hermann
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- *
HOLOCENE Epoch , *SWAMPS , *FLOODPLAIN forests , *RIVER channels , *CARBON cycle , *PEATLAND restoration , *FLUVIAL geomorphology - Abstract
Tropical peatlands are an important carbon reservoir; however, they are vulnerable to climate change, fire events, and human disturbances, and may become a significant carbon source if degraded. In this paper, we investigated the late Holocene record of vegetation change, peatland evolution, and C accumulation based on analysis of a sediment core through a Mauritia-flexuosa palm dominated swamp (locally called " aguajal ") in the Madre de Dios region in southern Peru to better understand tropical peatland dynamics. Sedimentation commenced within shallow water, ponded on an impervious substrate, perhaps within an abandoned river channel or oxbow lake (1380–820 cal yr BP) located adjacent to a steep escarpment with terra firme (upland) rainforest above and lateral to floodplain forests. This was followed by the development of marsh (820–640 cal yr BP). A closed-canopy Mauritia flexuosa -dominated palm swamp was subsequently established (640300calyr BP) which later changed into an open canopy and mixed Mauritia - Hedyosmum palm swamp (300 cal yr BP to present). Two major changes in peat and C accumulation rates were observed: (1) onset of peat and C accumulation at 820 cal yr BP and (2) decrease of peat and C accumulation after 520 cal yr BP. Comparisons of our results with palaeoecological records from aguajales in northern Peru suggest that the dynamics were different in this region. The peat and C accumulation rates in our study core in southern Peru were ca. 4 mm yr−1 and ca. 200 g m−2 yr−1 faster, similar to a few sites in northern Peru. Aguajales in Madre de Dios region in southern Peru are an important carbon sink. Analyzing the dynamics of aguajales which are a kind of typical peatlands in Amazonia and comparing among different sites allows exploration and prediction of regional peatlands' development under the potential future impact of natural changes. • First study of a palm peatland (aguajal) development in Madre de Dios region, southern Peru • This study includes late Holocene vegetation dynamics, peat and C accumulation of the aguajal • Controlling factors in the dynamics are fluvial changes and climate • Comparisons with northern Peru suggest different vegetation succession • Peat and C accumulation rates in Madre de Dios were faster, similar to a few sites in northern Peru [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Late Holocene fluvial activity and correlations with dendrochronology of subfossil trunks: Case studies of northeastern Romania.
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Rădoane, Maria, Nechita, Constantin, Chiriloaei, Francisca, Rădoane, Nicolae, Popa, Ionel, Roibu, Cătălin, and Robu, Delia
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *FLUVIAL geomorphology , *DENDROCHRONOLOGY - Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to describe the late Holocene behaviour of rivers using an interdisciplinary approach combining fluvial geomorphology and subfossil trunk dendrochronology. The subfossil wood material collected along the rivers was investigated for dendrometric and dendrochronologic parameters. The research methods in these fields helped us to understand the effect of the fluvial environment on riparian trees and their records and helped in reconstructing the riparian palaeoenvironment. The study area consists of two rivers with different typologies but comparable sizes: the Moldova River, which features a braided to wandering channel in its lower reach, and the Siret River, which features a sinuous-meandering channel. Along the 100-km-long floodplain of the former and the 144-km-long floodplain of the latter, we found and sampled 77 subfossil trunks, of which 26 were subjected to 14 C dating. The resulting data consist of floodplain facies mapping data, electric resistivity measurements, absolute dates, and dendrometric and dendrochronologic data. The results indicate that during a 100-year period, the two rivers were sensitive to climate change and anthropogenic effects, particularly a narrowing of the active channel by 76% in the braided channel and 38% in the sinuous-meandering channel. During the past 3300–3000 YBP, the Moldova River maintained its braided style, whereas the sinuous-meandering style has been characteristic of the Siret River for the previous 6800–4600 YBP. The two distinct fluvial environments are recorded in the dendrometric structure of the trunks buried in the channel-fill sediments. The braided fluvial environment was more effective in uprooting riparian trees and incorporating them in the floodplain deposits, whereas the sinuous-meandering style of stream effectively buried tree trunks in lateral accretion lobes. Absolute and dendrochronologic dating allowed for the reconstruction of timelines of the felling of the trees and estimates of the magnitude of the responsible hydrological event. The flood events on the Siret River with a recurrence interval of 200 years ( Q max ~ 2500–2800 m 3 /s) were those most effective in destroying riparian forests, and the events on the Moldova floods with a 100-year recurrence interval ( Q max ~ 1200–1400 m 3 /s) were the most effective. Dendrochronology allowed for identification of wet phases (i.e., 3500–2900 YBP, 2200–2075 YBP, and 1000–800 YBP) and dry phases (e.g., 3200–3150 or 2775–2700 YBP, 1400 YBP). Finally, we draw attention to the potential for creating a highly replicable dendrochronological series spanning at least 7000 YBP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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24. Paleodemography of Late Holocene hunter-gatherers from Patagonia (Santa Cruz, Argentina): An approach using multiple archaeological and bioarchaeological indicators.
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García Guraieb, Solana, Goñi, Rafael, and Tessone, Augusto
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PALEODEMOGRAPHY , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper summarizes and discusses the main results achieved over three decades of research on paleodemographic aspects of Late Holocene hunter-gatherers in Northwestern Santa Cruz (Argentina). Research has been guided by a model of regional settlement that proposes that, as a result of the progressive aridization process recorded in Patagonia during the Late Holocene, human groups would have reduced their residential mobility and concentrated their settlements in low altitude basins with water availability, such as Lake Cardiel and Lake Salitroso. Paleodemographic questions derived from the model relate to population regional continuity and dynamics and were tested using several lines of research at regional and local scales. The assessment of the chronological information and temporal trends of the archaeological record at the regional level allowed for a coarse grain paleodemographic approach, and acted as a mean to support hypotheses related to changes in mobility and land use strategies. Building on this, several lines of bioarchaeological evidence were used to address paleodemographic aspects of the model, including temporal, distributional, and compositional studies of the mortuary record, isotopic, morphometric and DNA analyses and the sex and age structure of the skeletal samples recovered in Lake Salitroso basin. Results point to a biological and cultural population continuity in the region during the Late Holocene. Also, a reduction in residential mobility would have favored a slight population growth of Lake Salitroso populations during the last millennium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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25. Isotopic evidence on human bone for declining maize consumption during the little ice age in central western Argentina.
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Gil, Adolfo F., Villalba, Ricardo, Ugan, Andrew, Cortegoso, Valeria, Neme, Gustavo, Michieli, Catalina Teresa, Novellino, Paula, and Durán, Víctor
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- *
CORN , *ISOTOPIC analysis , *FOOD consumption , *LITTLE Ice Age , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
This paper explores variation in maize consumption among human societies in arid environments of central-western Argentina over the last 2500 years. Increasingly positive human d 13 C signatures suggest a high intake of C 4 resources (maize) until ca . A.D. 1400. After this time, the importance of maize in the diet drops and never reaches pre-Hispanic consumption rates, despite the known importance of maize to Inka and other late-prehistoric societies in the region. This decline appears to be related to colder temperatures during the Little Ice Age from the beginning of the 15th to the mid19th centuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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26. Paleoenvironmental and geoarchaeological reconstruction from late Holocene slope records (Lower Huerva Valley, Ebro Basin, NE Spain).
- Author
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Pérez-Lambán, Fernando, Peña-Monné, José Luis, Fanlo-Loras, Javier, Picazo-Millán, Jesús V., Badia-Villas, David, Rubio-Fernández, Virginia, García-Giménez, Rosario, and Sampietro-Vattuone, María M.
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *ARID regions , *PALEOENVIRONMENTAL studies , *PALEOPEDOLOGY , *ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Slope deposits in semiarid regions are known to be very sensitive environments, especially those that occurred during the minor fluctuations of the late Holocene. In this paper we analyse Holocene colluvium genesis, composition, and paleoenvironmental meaning through the study of slope deposits in NE Spain. Two cumulative slope stages are described during this period. In the study area, both slope accumulations are superimposed and this has enabled an excellent preservation of the aggregative sequence and the paleosols corresponding to stabilisation stages. 14C and TL dating, as well as archaeological remains, provide considerable chronological precision for this sequence. The origin of the accumulation of the lower unit is placed around 4295–4083calyr BP/2346–2134calyr BC (late Chalcolithic) and it developed until the Iron Age in a cooler and wetter climate (Cold Iron Age). Under favourable conditions, a soil A-horizon was formed on top of this unit. A new slope accumulation was formed during the Little Ice Age. Within the slope two morphogenetic periods ending with A-horizons are distinguished and related with two main cold–wet climatic events. The study of these slopes provides a great amount of data for the paleoenvironmental and geoarchaeological reconstruction of the late Holocene in NE Spain. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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27. Stable isotope reconstructions of shellfish harvesting seasonality in an estuarine environment: implications for Late Holocene San Francisco Bay settlement patterns
- Author
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Eerkens, Jelmer W., Byrd, Brian F., Spero, Howard J., and Fritschi, AnnaMarie K.
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STABLE isotopes , *SHELLFISH culture , *SEASONAL temperature variations , *FISH remains (Archaeology) , *ESTUARINE ecology , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Abstract: Seasonality estimates based on stable isotope analyses of shellfish remains has been an important thrust of settlement pattern reconstruction, allowing researchers to place people on the landscape at points in space at different times of the year. In exposed coastal settings seasonality reconstructions are typically dependent on annual changes in water temperature. This paper has two goals. First, we continue development of a method for determining shellfish harvest seasonality in estuarine environments where annual salinity changes, not temperature, drive isotopic variation. Second, we contribute to settlement pattern studies by showing how small and large sites can be linked into a single system by examining different site types and shellfish species. Our case study focuses on the Late Prehistoric period of the San Francisco Peninsula, includes a large shellmound (CA-SMA-6) and an ephemeral camp (CA-SFR-171), and examines clam (Macoma spp.) and mussel (Mytilus spp.) harvesting. In this case, data support a fission-fusion settlement pattern, with periods of dispersal during late winter through early summer and aggregation in late summer through early winter. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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28. Late-Holocene environmental dynamics and climate variability in a Mediterranean high mountain environment (Sierra Nevada, Spain) inferred from lake sediments and historical sources.
- Author
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Oliva, Marc and Gómez-Ortiz, A
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *CLIMATE change , *GLOBAL environmental change , *SEDIMENTS , *GLACIERS - Abstract
Landscape dynamics in the periglacial belt of a high mountain Mediterranean environment is a process of rapid evolution but complex reconstruction. Following this purpose, in this paper we discuss data from two sources concerning the past evolution of the present-day periglacial environment in the Sierra Nevada (southern Iberian Peninsula): mountain lake sediments and documentary sources. La Mosca lake sedimentary record provides information about the palaeocological evolution in the Mulhacén cirque over the last three millennia, while documentary sources enable us to reconstruct the landscape evolution in the high lands of this massif over the last eight centuries. During the late Holocene cold and wet phases have favoured the activity of geomorphic processes, with ephemeral development of glaciers in the highest northern cirques, abundance of late-lying snow patches and a decrease of the vegetation cover in the highest catchments. By contrast, warm periods have been more conducive to geomorphic stability, with an extension of the vegetation grass cover, but without glaciers and with a lower density of snow patches in summer. The comparison of the palaeocological evolution and associated palaeoclimatic conditions in the Sierra Nevada with other regional proxies shows evidence of the moderate sensitivity of the geomorphological processes occurring in the massif during the late Holocene with respect to the climate variability prevailing in the Iberian Peninsula and neighbouring areas. According to lake sedimentary records, the ‘Little Ice Age’ has been the coldest period during the late Holocene. Historical sources suggest a temperature increase of 0.93°C since the middle of the 19th century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
29. An experimental approach to the study of interpersonal violence in Northeastern Patagonia (Argentina), during the late Holocene
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Gordón, Florencia and Bosio, Luis Alberto
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *SKULL , *HYPOTHESIS , *ECOLOGICAL assessment - Abstract
Abstract: This paper incorporates an experimental approach to the study of violence patterns in Northeastern Patagonia (Argentina) during the late Holocene. The underlying hypothesis considers a close association between socio-ecologic alterations during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA) (ca. 1150–600 years BP; , ) and a probable increase in conflict levels. In order to test this hypothesis, human skulls (n = 986) were analyzed for bone lesions, discriminating late bone lesions, such as those produced by metal tools. The experimental approach used swine (Sus scrofa domestica) skulls, as proxies for human skulls, and incorporated original sabers. From this discriminating analysis, it can be inferred that no significant increase in violence signs were recorded until the first stages of Hispanic-indigenous contact (first half of 17th century). These findings emphasize the need for a revision of the implications of the dynamics of human populations in Northeastern Patagonia during the late Holocene. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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30. Pre-Hispanic horticulture in the Paraná Delta (Argentina): archaeological and historical evidence.
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Bonomo, Mariano, Aceituno, FranciscoJ., Politis, GustavoG., and Pochettino, MariaL.
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PLANT remains (Archaeology) , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *AGRICULTURAL history , *GRAIN , *PRE-Columbian civilization , *PROSOPIS algarrobilla , *CASSAVA , *ANTIQUITIES , *HISTORY - Abstract
Many American cultivated species have been domesticated in the Neotropical Lowlands. While the southern limit of some cultivars (e.g. maize) is relatively well known for the Andean Region, the south-western limit of lowland horticulture has been poorly established in South America. Sixteenth-century European accounts mentioned the presence of cultivated plants in the Delta of the Paraná River, but until now this had not been confirmed by direct archaeobotanical data. This paper presents and discusses the results of starch grains analysis from six archaeological sites of the Paraná Delta (Argentina), ranging from 1302 to 1492 years cal. ad, which confirm the pre-Hispanic presence of cultivars in the area. Wild (algarrobo; South American mesquite) and domesticated (maize and beans) plant remains were found in ceramic containers and on grinding tools from those sites. Our research contributes new data on the late dispersion of cultivated species in the Paraná Delta, an area so far excluded from continental models for the dispersal of cultivars in the Americas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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31. Socio-environmental dynamics in the central Atacama desert (22°S) during the late Holocene.
- Author
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de Porras, M.E., Maldonado, A., Hayashida, F.M., Troncoso, A., Salazar, D., Parcero-Oubiña, C., Castro, V., and Fábrega-Álvarez, Pastor
- Subjects
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *FOSSIL pollen , *CLIMATE change , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *AGRICULTURAL intensification , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *EXTREME environments - Abstract
In the Central Atacama Desert (22°-24°S; henceforth CAD), around 3700 cal yrs BP, human economies begin to transition from relying mostly on hunting and gathering to increasingly incorporating horticulture and pastoralism became more intensive during the Late Intermediate Period (LIP; beginning at ca. 1050 cal yrs BP/900 AD). In this extreme environment, the well-being of past and present farming and herding communities is directly tied to water availability. The lack of proper paleoclimatic/environmental records in terms of their temporal/spatial resolution impeded evaluation whether sedentarization was synchronous, in some degree, with the amelioration of dry conditions recorded during the Late Holocene at millennial timescales. The present paper thus aims (1) to reconstruct the past environmental and climatic dynamics in the CAD (22°S) during the late Holocene at millennial to sub-centennial scales based on the pollen record of fossil rodent middens of Cuesta Chita site and; (2) to discuss their possible relationship to changes in cultivation and water management as seen at the archaeological sites of Topaín, Paniri and Turi, located in the Salado River basin. The CCH rodent midden pollen record reflects wetter (drier) than present phases around 4400, 3650, 3000, 2200–2100, 1600, 855–840, 520–450 and 100 cal yrs BP (980, 450-115 cal yrs BP). By the time that wetter-than-present conditions occurred in the CAD (Formative Period, 3500-1050 cal yrs BP), local communities had already developed small-scale horticultural practices, yet they did not develop extensive or intensive agricultural practices. Indeed, historical processes leading to economic transformations and the rapid adoption of intensive agriculture throughout the CAD after 1000 cal yrs BP occurred and were probably favored by wetter than present conditions, suggesting positive correlations between climatic and cultural change. However, these correlations are complex and non-deterministic. In fact, decreased moisture between 650 and 600 cal yrs BP in the Turi Basin was met by agropastoralists at Topaín with complex local strategies that included changing water management practices and significantly extending farmed lands. Similarly, the Topaín fields were abandoned during a period of much-wetter-than-present conditions. The chronologically fine-grained comparison of the CCH and archaeological records reveals that the relationship between climate and culture is complex, non-deterministic, and historically contingent, with examples of agricultural expansion during a time of water stress, and the abandonment of fields during a time of abundance. • Human-environment dynamics in the Central Atacama Desert during the Late Holocene. • Late Holocene climatic variability at millennial to sub-centennial resolution based on pollen records. • Wet (dry) phases occurred ∼4400, 3650, 3000, 2200-2100, 1600, 855-840, 520-450 and 100 (980, 450-115) cal yrs BP. • Human responses to climatic change are various and there is no simple relationship between water availability and land use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sustainable harvest or resource depression? Using ancient DNA to study the population dynamics of guanaco in western Argentina during the Holocene.
- Author
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Abbona, Cinthia Carolina, Neme, Gustavo, Johnson, Jeff, Gil, Adolfo, Villalba, Ricardo, Nagaoka, Lisa, Kim, Tracy, and Wolverton, Steve
- Subjects
- *
FOSSIL DNA , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *HUMAN settlements , *POPULATION dynamics , *ENVIRONMENTAL history , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *HUMAN ecology - Abstract
Zooarchaeologists have relied upon various approaches to study the impacts of harvest pressure and environmental change on ungulate populations, such as analysis of prey mortality patterns and morphometrics. Analysis of ancient DNA from ungulate bones and bone fragments from archaeological sites provides an additional means for studying prey population dynamics related to environmental change and human ecology over time. In this paper, we study the population history of the largest game animal in northwest Patagonia, the guanaco (Lama guanicoe). Our study relies on the use of Bayesian Skyline Plots to determine shifts in estimated guanaco population size based on analysis of ancient mitochondrial DNA. Our results indicate that hunting by humans in addition to increases in aridity during the late Holocene led to a decline in the guanaco population in the region, which is in contrast to the harvest and environmental history in other parts of Patagonia (south of our study area). Using a weight of evidence approach that includes proxies of environmental change, human population dynamics, exploitation of guanacos, and estimates of guanaco population size, we argue that the late Holocene shift in guanaco population size was a driving factor in subsistence and settlement change related to resource intensification during the late Holocene in northwest Patagonia. • Demographic reconstruction of guanaco population dynamics during the Holocene. •Estimated population size is based on ancient DNA analysis through Next Generation Sequencing. •There are key changes in guanaco population size during the late Holocene. •Late Holocene guanaco population relates to increased hunting pressure in northwest Patagonia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Whole-rock and clay mineralogy as paleoenvironmental tracers during the Late Holocene sedimentary evolution of the Doñana National Park (SW Spain).
- Author
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Ruiz, Francisco, Pozo, Manuel, Carretero, María Isabel, Muñoz, Juan Manuel, González-Regalado, María Luz, Abad, Manuel, Izquierdo, Tatiana, Vidal, Joaquín Rodríguez, Cáceres, Luis Miguel, and Monge, Guadalupe
- Subjects
- *
MINERALOGY , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *NATIONAL parks & reserves , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *CLAY minerals , *SEDIMENTARY facies (Geology) , *QUARTZ - Abstract
In recent decades, numerous studies have focused on the paleoenvironmental reconstruction of coastal areas, with special emphasis on the detection of tsunami layers. These multidisciplinary investigations usually do not study the mineralogy of the environment as well as the underlying or overlying layers.This paper analyzes the whole-rock mineralogy and clay minerals contained in seven short cores obtained in the Doñana National Park (SW Spain) and deposited during the 5.000–1.500 cal. yr BP interval.The main purpose is to deduce the paleoenvironments from which the sedimentary facies present in them were formed and an approximation to the transport mechanisms involved in their formation. Results of X-ray diffraction analysis indicate that the main minerals are phyllosilicates, quartz and calcite, with smectites and illite being the most abundant phyllosilicates. According to the whole-rock mineralogy and additional statistical procedures (correlation, cluster analysis), the main source of quartz is the erosion of Doñana spit, while the Guadalquivir river, its tributaries and the old lagoon have contributed mainly with smectite-rich phyllosilicates. On the contrary, waves, tides and high-energy events introduced illite and bioclasts in an old lagoon from the nearby shallow marine sectors. Consequently, the mineralogical analysis is revealed as an interesting tool for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in this area, since it varies between different sedimentary environments. In addition, the combined study of whole-rock and clay mineralogy detects the tsunami layers and the provenance of their sediments in the studied cores. Unlabelled Image • The mineralogy is a powerful tool to reconstruct sedimentary sources. • In the Roman Lacus Ligustinus, phyllosilicates and smectites were supplied by the Guadalquivir River. • The mineralogy of the outer lagoonal area was controlled by the Doñana spit. • High-energy events caused the introduction of bioclastic quartz-rich sands. • Illite was introduced from the adjacent shelf to the innermost lagoonal zones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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