3.8 Article

Unravelling Hominin Activities in the Zooarchaeological Assemblage of Barranco Leon (Orce, Granada, Spain)

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出版社

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s41982-022-00111-1

关键词

Early Pleistocene; Taphonomy; First settlement of Europe; Cutmarks; Hominin-carnivore interactions; Bone surface modifications

资金

  1. CRUE-CSIC agreement
  2. Springer Nature
  3. Junta de Andalucia, Consejeria de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte: Orce Research Project `Primeras ocupaciones humanas y contexto paleoecologico a partir de los depositos pliopleistocenos de la cuenca Guadix-Baza: zona arqueologica de la Cuenca de Orce (Grana [BC.03.032/17]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [PRE2019-089411, RTI2018-099850-B-I00]
  5. University of Salamanca
  6. Arts and Humanities Research Council through a Baillie Gifford AHRC Scholarship (OOC-DTP program) at the University of Oxford [AH/R012709/1]
  7. FPI Predoctoral Scholarship [PRE2020-094482]
  8. European Union-NextGenerationEU [2021URV-MS-03]
  9. Ministry of Universities and Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan
  10. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017SGR-859, 2017SGR-1666]
  11. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the `Maria de Maeztu' program for Units of Excellence [CEX2019-000945-M]
  12. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [CEX2019-000945-M-20-1]

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This study contributes to our understanding of the subsistence practices of the first European settlers through zooarchaeological and taphonomic analysis of a Palaeolithic site in Spain. The results suggest that waterborne processes played a significant role in the accumulation and alteration of faunal remains, and both hominins and carnivores were involved in the acquisition and modification of carcasses.
Little is known about the subsistence practices of the first European settlers, mainly due to the shortage of archaeological sites in Europe older than a million years. This article contributes to the knowledge of the subsistence of the first Europeans with new zooarchaeology and taphonomic data from the Palaeolithic site of Barranco Leon (Orce, Granada, Spain). We present the results of the analysis of the faunal assemblages retrieved in the context of new excavations undertaken between 2016 and 2020. We have followed a standard methodology for the identification and quantification of species, mortality profiles, skeletal representation and taphonomic analysis. With regard to the taphonomic evidence, we have documented the extent of rounding, abrasion and other alterations. Finally, we examined traces from the activities of carnivores and hominins that led to the accumulation and alteration of the bone assemblages. Results indicate that the archaeo-paleontological deposits from Barranco Leon present a dual-patterned mixed taphonomic origin. The first phase primarily involved waterborne processes (BL-D1), which led to the accumulation of lithic raw materials, a few archaeological stone tools, and some faunal remains with percussion and cutmarks. The second phase (BL-D2) contains several stone tools associated with faunal remains with more anthropogenic alterations, such as cutmarks and percussion marks. After analysing the Barranco Leon zooarchaeological assemblage, the present study concludes that hominins had access to the meat and within-bone nutrients of animals of diverse sizes. However, the specific carcass acquisition mechanisms that hominins followed are less certain because the presence of tooth marks suggests that carnivores also played a role in the accumulation and modification of the Barranco Leon faunal assemblage.

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