6533b82dfe1ef96bd1290842
RESEARCH PRODUCT
THE PLEISTOCENE–HOLOCENE TRANSITION IN THE IBERIAN PENINSULA: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN HUMAN ADAPTATIONS
João ZilhãoCésar González SainzManuel R. González MoralesJ. Emili AuraValentín VillaverdeLawrence Guy Straussubject
PrehistoryReinterpretationGeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistocenePeninsulaPeriod (geology)Subsistence agricultureMagdalenianArchaeologyHoloceneEarth-Surface Processesdescription
Abstract Data obtained from recent excavations (as well as from selected older excavations) are used to outline the principal environmental, technological and economic aspects of the Pleistocene–Holocene transition in three distinct regions of the Iberian Peninsula: Portugal, Cantabrian and Mediterranean Spain. The period covered extends from the terminal Paleolithic Magdalenian period to the initial Neolithic. Despite proximity to SW France and many similarities with that classic prehistoric culture area in terms of artistic/symbolic expression and technology, the Iberian regions show significant differences, especially in terms of subsistence strategies and their development during the Tardiglacial. While there are striking similarities among the three regions with respect to overall patterns of changes in technology, art and subsistence, there are interesting differences of detail, probably linked to environmental differences among these distinctive coastal zones. Changes in artistic activity are also examined, including the disappearance of cave art and the development of geometric motifs in mobile art in Cantabria, as well as a reinterpretation of Levantine art.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1998-07-01 | Quaternary International |