2024-03-28T13:46:43Zhttp://digital.csic.es/dspace-oai/requestoai:digital.csic.es:10261/1435252018-08-06T07:22:37Zcom_10261_19com_10261_7col_10261_272
Territory and abiotic resources between 33 and 15.6 ka at Vale Boi (SW Portugal)
Pereira, Telmo
Bicho, Nuno F.
Cascalheira, João
Infantini, Leandro
Marreiros, João
Paixão, Eduardo
Terradas-Batlle, Xavier
Upper Paleolithic
Vale Boi
Southwestern Iberia
Lithic raw materials
The environmental shifts during the Late Pleistocene had major influences in the landscape and, consequently, in the available resources. This had direct impact on human behavior and ecology, requiring people to constantly adjust to new economical conditions. In coastal areas, the retreat of the shoreline during the colder phases might have made available presently underwater raw material sources in the form of outcrops and gravels, eventually making it easier to gather lithic raw materials. In this paper, we present our preliminary results on the diachronic variability of raw materials in Vale Boi. Vale Boi is a coastal site, located 2.5 km from the present coastline, in the margins of a freshwater stream. The site has three different loci, all rich in lithics, fauna (including marine), bone tools, adornments, charcoal, and ochre, and evidence of continuous human occupation from c. 33 to 15.6 ka cal BP. This chronostratigraphic record makes it a perfect study case for the understanding of coastal populations' behavior and economy throughout the Upper Paleolithic. Our objective is to infer the territory of resources exploitation, landscape, and economic patterns. Raw material sources are usually fixed points on the landscape (in contrast to other resources such as fauna and flora) and, therefore, are one of the best ways of understanding how people moved in the landscape and, consequently, to infer past human behavior. We used a macroscopic approach in both the archaeological and the geological record in order to correlate sources and artifacts. Despite the absence of detailed quantitative data on each chert type, our results show that the hunter–gatherers who occupied Vale Boi during the Upper Paleolithic not only used several raw materials but also a variety of sources of the same raw material. This happened both diachronically and synchronically, suggesting that not only the complete sequence as well as each archaeological layer seem to have had a considerable economic complexity with the use of adjacent and distal sources. With this paper, we aim to present updated information on the variability of raw materials at Vale Boi, including the chert assemblages, along with new chert sources in order to establish a basis for a future detailed study on the raw material sourcing at the site.
2017-02-07T09:06:03Z
2017-02-07T09:06:03Z
2016
2017-02-07T09:06:04Z
artículo
Quaternary International (412/A) : 124-134 (2016)
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/143525
10.1016/j.quaint.2015.08.071
eng
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.08.071
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618215008496
Sí
closedAccess
Pergamon Press