Living at high altitude carries risks, so settlement there can be thought marginal. Its success or failure ought to be dependent on the environment and the climate. But recent fieldwork in the French Alps shows that exploitation was not coincident with climatic conditions: Mesolithic people found the hunting good; in the climatic optimum of the Roman period the high altitudes were said to be uninhabitable and apparently were; while in the Little Ice Age of the fourteenth century and later, the high Alps were at their busiest. The author hypothesises that social control and perception, rather than climate, were the determinant factors
International audienceThe research program Pygmalion consisted in a 4-yearslong unprecedented scient...
This article presents a synthesis of evidence from fieldwork that has taken place on the Sainte Vict...
In the Southern French Alps, the first evidence for prehistoric human presence has been revealed by ...
Research into Alpine archaeology in France has concentrated on the lower altitudes and has emphasize...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to assess the development of summer activities in the...
International audienceThis paper elucidates the nature of human–environment interactions in a mounta...
During the end of the Pleistocene and the early Holocene, there were rapid climatic changes. The las...
International audienceThis volume brings together 16 papers which investigate various aspects of hig...
In this paper issues concerning landscape research in mountainous areas are discussed starting from ...
Daily weather, seasonal weather conditions and anomalies, long-term climate change, and natural disa...
The beginnings of the continuous human presence and of pastoral activities in the high mountainous r...
The basin of the Upper Ubaye (situated to the northeast of Alpes-de-Hautes-Provence) is well known f...
ABSTRACT. The present article reports on the results and interpretation of a total of 235 radiocarbo...
International audienceThe research program Pygmalion consisted in a 4-yearslong unprecedented scient...
This article presents a synthesis of evidence from fieldwork that has taken place on the Sainte Vict...
In the Southern French Alps, the first evidence for prehistoric human presence has been revealed by ...
Research into Alpine archaeology in France has concentrated on the lower altitudes and has emphasize...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to assess the development of summer activities in the...
International audienceThis paper elucidates the nature of human–environment interactions in a mounta...
During the end of the Pleistocene and the early Holocene, there were rapid climatic changes. The las...
International audienceThis volume brings together 16 papers which investigate various aspects of hig...
In this paper issues concerning landscape research in mountainous areas are discussed starting from ...
Daily weather, seasonal weather conditions and anomalies, long-term climate change, and natural disa...
The beginnings of the continuous human presence and of pastoral activities in the high mountainous r...
The basin of the Upper Ubaye (situated to the northeast of Alpes-de-Hautes-Provence) is well known f...
ABSTRACT. The present article reports on the results and interpretation of a total of 235 radiocarbo...
International audienceThe research program Pygmalion consisted in a 4-yearslong unprecedented scient...
This article presents a synthesis of evidence from fieldwork that has taken place on the Sainte Vict...
In the Southern French Alps, the first evidence for prehistoric human presence has been revealed by ...