International audienceFrom ritual, commercial to pastoral activities, domestic animals have played a major role in the use and trajectories of mountain landscapesover the last seven millennia in the Alps. However, for two decades, alpine archaeological research has rarely moved beyondthe simple identification of past human activities, rather than their characterisation and the concomitant assessment of practicesand techniques. The reasons for this are many; perhaps most significant is the relative dearth of archaeological and zooarchaeologicalevidence in the high-altitude zones.The European research project PATHWAy (A*MIDEX-France and ARHC-UK) focuses on studying the diversity of past livestock managementstrategies and their impacts on land...