4.7 Article

The Middle Pleistocene archaeological record of Greece and the role of the Aegean in hominin dispersals: new data and interpretations

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages 1-15

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.04.004

Keywords

Lower Palaeolithic; Aegean; Landscape dynamics; Hominin dispersals; Archaeological preservation

Funding

  1. State Scholarships Foundation of Greece
  2. ERC Starting Grant Project PaGE [283503]

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In the debate about hominin dispersals, Greece is expected to have been among the core areas for the peopling of Eurasia, serving as a 'refugium' and source region for (re)colonizations. Yet, its early Pleistocene record is still scarce, forming a conspicuous 'gap' in the early human geography of the Mediterranean. Here we investigate this gap and provide for the first time a synthesis of the Lower Palaeolithic record of Greece. Our study adopts a geoarchaeological approach to explain the current status of the record and argues that the 'absence of evidence' should be understood as the result of the biasing effects of erosional geomorphic processes and not as an indication of a former absence of hominins. In this line, the potential for archaeological preservation and recovery is assessed as a function of landscape dynamics. Climatic seasonality, tectonic activity, high relief and marine inundations have altogether contributed to significant reworking and/or total loss of archaeological sites: in spatial terms, only about 2-5% of the Lower Palaeolithic record of Greece may have survived up to the present. On the other hand, we interpret recent geological data, which show that half of the Aegean Sea would have been subaerially exposed for most of the early Pleistocene. Our results emphasize the potentially central role of the Aegean region in hominin dispersals, both as a biogeographical landbridge and as a highly productive landscape for occupation. This conclusion opens up new prospects for future fieldwork in an area that was hitherto essentially neglected. Finally, in showing how geomorphic processes bias site distribution patterns, the results and methodological perspective developed here can be seen as having implications that are wider than the geographical limits of the Greek Peninsula: they are pertinent to the investigation and interpretation of the early Pleistocene archaeological records in the highly dynamic landscapes of southern Europe - if not in even broader scales. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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