4.7 Article

Sedimentary processes and palaeoenvironments from La Combette sequence (southeastern France): climatic insights on the Last Interglacial/Glacial transition

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2021.110503

Keywords

MIS 5-3; Multiproxy; Neanderthal; Loess; Micromorphology; Chronology

Funding

  1. CNRS CEPAM-UMR7264
  2. ANR [ANR-10-LABX-52]

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This study reexamines the sedimentary record of La Combette site in Provence, providing a detailed description of environmental changes from the Last Interglacial to the Early Wurmian Glacial period. By integrating various research methods, it reveals the climate instability and environmental evolution during this period, as well as the last known Neanderthal occupation at the site.
During the Last Interglacial-Early Glacial transition (MISS-MIS4; similar to 73 ka), substantial hydroclimatic changes affected morphogenetic processes, landform dynamics, and ecosystem variability over the Mediterranean subalpine valleys. This transition is mainly preserved in the northern Mediterranean region in continuous marine, lacustrine, and peat bog archives. To understand better local-to-regional hydro-sedimentary processes, their climatic significance, and their direct impact on prehistoric settlements, this manuscript reinvestigates a known continental sedimentary record with revised methods. The Middle Palaeolithic site of La Combette in the western Provence region (southeastern France) presents a thick sedimentary key sequence for studying environmental changes from the MISS to the MIS3. A review of previous studies with the integration of new micromorphological, sedimentological, physicochemical, malacological, and luminescence ages allows us to characterize the sedimentary processes and environmental patterns during this major climatic transition. Alternating warm and cold conditions and shifting vegetation patterns reflect the strong environmental instability of the end of the Last Interglacial Period. The emergence of a steppe-like ecology dominated by cryo-turbated loess deposition marks the beginning of the Early Wurmian Glacial period (MIS4-MIS3; similar to 73 ka to similar to 50 ka), contemporaneous with the last Neanderthal occupation at La Combette rock shelter. Comparisons with regional palaeoclimatic data allow us to detail local climatic settings and provide evidence of divergences with larger-scale quantitative reconstructions during a period of significant environmental and socio-cultural shifts.

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