Sheep predominate the Early Neolithic faunal assemblages in the Iberian Peninsula. Their exploitation for meat and milk production made them key to the economy of these early farming societies. Management of sheep breeding season and feeding in the context of the local environment were decisive in obtaining these livestock products. This work focuses on these aspects through stable isotope and dental microwear analyses on sheep teeth from the cave of Chaves (Huesca, Spain). The results show the existence of “out of season” (autumn/early winter) sheep births in the Early Neolithic, contrasting significantly with spring lambing prevailing in Neolithic husbandries elsewhere in Europe and confirming the antiquity of a western Mediterranean char...
The Early Neolithic involved an important social and economic shift that can be tested not only with...
After years of intense fieldwork, our knowledge about the Neolithisation of the Pyrenees has conside...
International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from ...
The beginning of husbandry in the Iberian Peninsula has been documented from the second half of the ...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
International audienceSheep were the most important species in the first domestic flocks in the Earl...
Although the frequency of pastoral activities involving vertical sheep mobility has decreased over t...
International audienceDuring the course of the diffusion of Neolithic agropastoral societies across ...
The introduction and adoption of livestock played a pivotal role in shaping subsistence strategies o...
International audienceThe arrival of early farmers and their livestock in the western Mediterranean ...
This pilot study investigates the existence of seasonal movements of sheep – transhumance – in Iron ...
The objective of this study is to contribute to a better definition of the technical system of the l...
After years of intense fieldwork, our knowledge about the Neolithisation of the Pyrenees has conside...
Animal mobility is a common strategy to overcome scarcity of food and the related over-grazing of pa...
The Early Neolithic involved an important social and economic shift that can be tested not only with...
After years of intense fieldwork, our knowledge about the Neolithisation of the Pyrenees has conside...
International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from ...
The beginning of husbandry in the Iberian Peninsula has been documented from the second half of the ...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
International audienceSheep were the most important species in the first domestic flocks in the Earl...
Although the frequency of pastoral activities involving vertical sheep mobility has decreased over t...
International audienceDuring the course of the diffusion of Neolithic agropastoral societies across ...
The introduction and adoption of livestock played a pivotal role in shaping subsistence strategies o...
International audienceThe arrival of early farmers and their livestock in the western Mediterranean ...
This pilot study investigates the existence of seasonal movements of sheep – transhumance – in Iron ...
The objective of this study is to contribute to a better definition of the technical system of the l...
After years of intense fieldwork, our knowledge about the Neolithisation of the Pyrenees has conside...
Animal mobility is a common strategy to overcome scarcity of food and the related over-grazing of pa...
The Early Neolithic involved an important social and economic shift that can be tested not only with...
After years of intense fieldwork, our knowledge about the Neolithisation of the Pyrenees has conside...
International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from ...