On the Iberian Peninsula, abrupt climate shifts during the Late Pleistocene impacted human and natural systems. Our knowledge of human adaptive responses to these climatic perturbations has improved in recent years with the development of new radiocarbon techniques that have increased the temporal resolution of cultural chronologies. At the same time, new high-resolution paleoclimatic records from Greenland ice cores, deep-sea sediment cores, speleothems, and microfaunal assemblages have permitted detailed paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Combined with the archaeological record of culture change, these data sets allow for a better understanding of the nature of human socio-ecological systems during the Late Pleistocene. Here we pre...
Some areas in Western Europe indicate hiatuses in human occupations, which cannot be systematically ...
Throughout prehistory, landscapes were repeatedly subjected to both global and localized climatic fl...
Abstract: The impact of deteriorating climatic conditions on variability in the archaeological recor...
During Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2, abrupt climate changes created highly variable paleoenvironment...
The cave site of Lapa do Picareiro, Portugal contains a deep (~10 m) sedimentary sequence representi...
A link between climate change and human evolution during the Pleistocene has often been assumed but ...
The Iberian Peninsula south of the Ebro River enjoyed one of the mildest climates of Pleistocene Eur...
In Western Europe, the Upper Paleolithic is marked by clear regional and diachronic technological di...
Gruta do Caldeirão features a c. 6 m-thick archaeological stratification capped by Holocene layers A...
Solutrean culture has been interpreted as a response to the Last Glacial Maximum in western Europe. ...
The cooling and drying associated with the so-called '8.2 ka event' have long been hypothesized as h...
Solutrean culture has been interpreted as a response to the Last Glacial Maximum in western Europe. ...
Grotta del Romito has been the subject of numerous archaeological, chronological and palaeoenvironme...
Adaptation to Late Pleistocene climate change is an oft-cited potential contributor to Neanderthal d...
Data obtained from recent excavations (as well as from selected older excavations) are used to outli...
Some areas in Western Europe indicate hiatuses in human occupations, which cannot be systematically ...
Throughout prehistory, landscapes were repeatedly subjected to both global and localized climatic fl...
Abstract: The impact of deteriorating climatic conditions on variability in the archaeological recor...
During Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2, abrupt climate changes created highly variable paleoenvironment...
The cave site of Lapa do Picareiro, Portugal contains a deep (~10 m) sedimentary sequence representi...
A link between climate change and human evolution during the Pleistocene has often been assumed but ...
The Iberian Peninsula south of the Ebro River enjoyed one of the mildest climates of Pleistocene Eur...
In Western Europe, the Upper Paleolithic is marked by clear regional and diachronic technological di...
Gruta do Caldeirão features a c. 6 m-thick archaeological stratification capped by Holocene layers A...
Solutrean culture has been interpreted as a response to the Last Glacial Maximum in western Europe. ...
The cooling and drying associated with the so-called '8.2 ka event' have long been hypothesized as h...
Solutrean culture has been interpreted as a response to the Last Glacial Maximum in western Europe. ...
Grotta del Romito has been the subject of numerous archaeological, chronological and palaeoenvironme...
Adaptation to Late Pleistocene climate change is an oft-cited potential contributor to Neanderthal d...
Data obtained from recent excavations (as well as from selected older excavations) are used to outli...
Some areas in Western Europe indicate hiatuses in human occupations, which cannot be systematically ...
Throughout prehistory, landscapes were repeatedly subjected to both global and localized climatic fl...
Abstract: The impact of deteriorating climatic conditions on variability in the archaeological recor...