0000000000424661

AUTHOR

Ethel Allué

showing 5 related works from this author

Animal husbandry in Sicilian prehistory: The zooarchaeological perspective from Vallone Inferno (Scillato, Palermo)

2023

Starting in the mid-6th millennium cal BCE, Neolithic groups occupied the midlands of Sicily. The economy of these groups was based primarily on livestock farming. Archaeological and archaeobotanical data indicate an intensification of livestock practices during the Early Bronze Age, leading to a change in the landscape in the form of more open forests. The Vallone Inferno rockshelter in the Madonie massif is one of the few sites that has been systematically excavated in these midlands, and has yielded evidence of Middle Neolithic and Early Bronze Age occupations. This work focuses on the study of prehistoric husbandry in the Sicilian midlands and highlands through the analysis of the Vallo…

Zooarchaeology Middle Neolithic Early Bronze Age Sicilian uplands Madonie massifSettore L-ANT/01 - Preistoria E ProtostoriaArcheologySettore L-ANT/10 - Metodologie Della Ricerca ArcheologicaSettore L-ANT/09 - Topografia AnticaJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports
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New data on Sicilian prehistoric and historic evolution in a mountain context, Vallone Inferno (Scillato, Italy)

2013

Vallone Inferno rock-shelter is an archaeological site located in the Madonie mountain range in Sicily. Archaeological excavation and research have provided a long prehistoric and historic sequence from the Neolithic to the medieval period, this being the most complete work in this area at present. In this paper we present the preliminary data provided by a multidisciplinary study based on pottery, lithic, human, faunal and plant remains. Stratigraphic studies have identified four complexes, of which complex 3 has provided almost all the archaeological remains. 14C AMS dates, obtained from four samples, place the human activities between 2601 cal BC and 644 cal AD. These dates are coherent …

Settore L-ANT/01 - Preistoria E Protostoriageography.geographical_feature_categoryContext (archaeology)General EngineeringExcavationSettore L-ANT/09 - Topografia AnticaArchaeologylanguage.human_languagePrehistorySequence (geology)GeographyAridificationlanguagePotteryMultidisciplinary study Neolithic-medieval period Pastoral activities Environmental changes Madonie mountain range SicilySicilianMountain range
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Anthracology from the Far East: a case study from the upper Ying valley (Henan province, China)

2011

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Disentangling human from natural factors: Taphonomical value of microanatomical features on archaeological wood and charcoal assemblages

2020

International audience; Archaeobotanical charcoal and wood analyses rely on the observation of different macro and microanatomical features affecting wood structure to variable extents. These features may result from a wide range of intrinsic and extrinsic factors alluding to different stages of the wood's taphonomical history: initial growth conditions, human selection, transformation/use and discard, post-depositional processes and archaeological sampling strategies. Papers in this volume address taphonomy in this broad sense, through recent methodological work mainly based on experimentation and case studies from a variety of chrono-cultural and geographical contexts. The authors present…

Value (ethics)010506 paleontologyArcheologyTaphonomy[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory060102 archaeology06 humanities and the arts15. Life on land01 natural sciencesArchaeologyNatural (archaeology)Social dynamicsGeographyNatural processesvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_medium0601 history and archaeologyCharcoal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports
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Holocene history of Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Mill.) woodlands in the Ebro Basin (NE Spain). Climate-biased or human-induced?

2020

Abstract This paper reviews the past distribution of Aleppo pine woodlands in the Ebro Basin, Northeastern Iberia, from the Mesolithic to Modern times based on wood charcoal data. The aim is to detail the chronological timing and the drivers explaining the long-term presence of Aleppo pine woodlands and associated thermophilous flora. The available charcoal data support the early spread of Pinus halepensis during the Mesolithic (ca. 9000 cal BP) accompanied by Mediterranean trees and shrubs like Quercus sp. evergreen, Juniperus sp., Arbutus unedo, Pistacia lentiscus, Rhamnus/Phillyrea, Cistaceae, and Rosmarinus officinalis, as a local response to global climate change in the Early Holocene.…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climate010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPaleontologyForestryAnthropizationWoodlandEvergreenbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesbiogeography; Ebro basin; human impact; paleoclimate; Pinus halepensis; wood charcoal analysisShrublandDeciduousAleppo PineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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