In this paper, we provide new data on fish resource exploitation during the Mesolithic and Neolithic period on the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula. Evidence from four different sites is presented: Vale Marim I (end of the seventh/beginning of the sixth millennium cal BCE) and Vale Pincel I (2nd and 3rd quarters of the sixth millennium cal BCE), both located on the southwestern Portuguese coast, and La Esparragosa and SET Parralejos (fourth-third millennia cal BCE), both located on the southern Spanish coast. The analysis of the lithic assemblages by means of use-wear analysis provided evidence of fish-processing activities. The analysis of the archaeological tools has been based on a renewed experimental framework for fish-related u...
Eastern Mediterranean archaeological sites record intensified marine resource use among coastal hunt...
There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due ...
Prehistoric shell middens hold valuable evidence of past human–environment interactions. In this stu...
In this paper, we provide new data on fish resource exploitation during the Mesolithic and Neolithic...
Abstract It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites were uncover...
The small collection of marine fish remains retrieved at the Epipaleolithic-Neolithic site of Cova F...
Altres ajuts: Acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICThis work was funded by the National Agency for Research ...
It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites have been recovered during the past ...
ABSTRACT: Human groups exploited molluscs during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition (MNT) at Pico R...
This contribution directly relates to the paper published by Wheeler in 1978 entitled ‘Why were ther...
The Mesolithic period in the Cantabrian region, a coastal area located in northern Spain, is charact...
The subject of this study falls into two parts. Firstly an examination of the methodology of the an...
The onset of the Holocene is marked by new human ecological adaptations that are associated with the...
Vale Pincel I is one of the most relevant sites for the study of the Neolithic transition in the Sou...
Coastal shell middens, a prominent feature of the Mesolithic (11,500–6000 cal BP) archaeological re...
Eastern Mediterranean archaeological sites record intensified marine resource use among coastal hunt...
There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due ...
Prehistoric shell middens hold valuable evidence of past human–environment interactions. In this stu...
In this paper, we provide new data on fish resource exploitation during the Mesolithic and Neolithic...
Abstract It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites were uncover...
The small collection of marine fish remains retrieved at the Epipaleolithic-Neolithic site of Cova F...
Altres ajuts: Acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICThis work was funded by the National Agency for Research ...
It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites have been recovered during the past ...
ABSTRACT: Human groups exploited molluscs during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition (MNT) at Pico R...
This contribution directly relates to the paper published by Wheeler in 1978 entitled ‘Why were ther...
The Mesolithic period in the Cantabrian region, a coastal area located in northern Spain, is charact...
The subject of this study falls into two parts. Firstly an examination of the methodology of the an...
The onset of the Holocene is marked by new human ecological adaptations that are associated with the...
Vale Pincel I is one of the most relevant sites for the study of the Neolithic transition in the Sou...
Coastal shell middens, a prominent feature of the Mesolithic (11,500–6000 cal BP) archaeological re...
Eastern Mediterranean archaeological sites record intensified marine resource use among coastal hunt...
There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due ...
Prehistoric shell middens hold valuable evidence of past human–environment interactions. In this stu...