In this investigation, we use a socio-environmental multi-proxy approach to empirically test hypotheses of recurrent resilience cycles and the role of climate forcing in shaping such cycles on the Iberian Peninsula during mid-Holocene times. Our approach combines time series reconstructions of societal and environmental variables from the southern Iberian Peninsula across a 3000 yr time interval (6000–3000 cal yr BP), covering major societal and climate reorganisation. Our approach is based on regional compilations of climate variables from diverse terrestrial archives and integrates new marine climate records from the Western Mediterranean. Archaeological variables include changes in material culture, settlement reconstructions and estimat...
In Mediterranean and north-African regions, cultural trajectories have shown trends sometimes coinci...
This article analyses high-quality hydroclimate proxy records and spatial reconstructions from the C...
The reconstruction of past demographic patterns is a fundamental step towards a better understanding...
In this investigation, we use a socio-environmental multi-proxy approach to empirically test hypothe...
This paper deals with prehistoric communities at the end of the 3rd millennium BC in Northwest Europ...
The end of the third millennium BCE represents (not only) on the Iberian Peninsula the time of trans...
In light of recent climate changes, it is important to also gain knowledge about the spatial manifes...
The F1 project aims to identify transformative events in societies of Southern Iberia, and whether t...
rchaeologically the turn from the 3rd to the 2nd millennium BCE is characterized by the transition f...
The 8.2 ka BP event may represent the largest, most abrupt Holocene climate event. This paper examin...
Within the F1 project of the CRC 1266 ‘Scales of Transformation‘ we are investigating the 4.2 ka BP ...
The SW coast of the Iberian Peninsula experiences a lack of palaeoenvironmental and archaeological d...
International audienceWe conducted palynological, sedimentological, and chronological analyses of a ...
In the eastern Mediterranean area, coherent patterns and synchronous events around 4.2 kaBP suggest ...
A multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental study (pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, charcoal particles, mollus...
In Mediterranean and north-African regions, cultural trajectories have shown trends sometimes coinci...
This article analyses high-quality hydroclimate proxy records and spatial reconstructions from the C...
The reconstruction of past demographic patterns is a fundamental step towards a better understanding...
In this investigation, we use a socio-environmental multi-proxy approach to empirically test hypothe...
This paper deals with prehistoric communities at the end of the 3rd millennium BC in Northwest Europ...
The end of the third millennium BCE represents (not only) on the Iberian Peninsula the time of trans...
In light of recent climate changes, it is important to also gain knowledge about the spatial manifes...
The F1 project aims to identify transformative events in societies of Southern Iberia, and whether t...
rchaeologically the turn from the 3rd to the 2nd millennium BCE is characterized by the transition f...
The 8.2 ka BP event may represent the largest, most abrupt Holocene climate event. This paper examin...
Within the F1 project of the CRC 1266 ‘Scales of Transformation‘ we are investigating the 4.2 ka BP ...
The SW coast of the Iberian Peninsula experiences a lack of palaeoenvironmental and archaeological d...
International audienceWe conducted palynological, sedimentological, and chronological analyses of a ...
In the eastern Mediterranean area, coherent patterns and synchronous events around 4.2 kaBP suggest ...
A multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental study (pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, charcoal particles, mollus...
In Mediterranean and north-African regions, cultural trajectories have shown trends sometimes coinci...
This article analyses high-quality hydroclimate proxy records and spatial reconstructions from the C...
The reconstruction of past demographic patterns is a fundamental step towards a better understanding...