International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from the sixth millennium BC onwards, that Neolithic societies originating from Italy settled mostly along coastal areas but also inland, in high moun- tainous areas. By then, Corsica was already experiencing some Mediterranean climate trends and was covered with dense forests. In order to assess how these Neolithic societies sustainably occupied this new insular territory, we need to understand how the local environment and resources were incorporated in the pastoral system. Osteological and isotopic analyses on remains from the sites of Araguina Sennola (late fifth – early third millennia cal BC) and Montlaur (4100–3600 cal BC) investigated the ...
We synthesise reported stable isotope values for domesticates and wild herbivores from sites spannin...
This paper investigates agricultural management choices of farmers at the Neolithic site of Kouphvou...
International audienceCorsica was occasionally inhabited during the 9th-7th millennia BC, but the hu...
International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from ...
International audienceThe arrival of early farmers and their livestock in the western Mediterranean ...
International audienceDuring the course of the diffusion of Neolithic agropastoral societies across ...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
The beginning of husbandry in the Iberian Peninsula has been documented from the second half of the ...
The objective of this study is to contribute to a better definition of the technical system of the l...
International audienceThe importance of domestic caprine in the of medieval Provence (10th-15th cent...
We synthesise reported stable isotope values for domesticates and wild herbivores from sites spannin...
This paper investigates agricultural management choices of farmers at the Neolithic site of Kouphvou...
International audienceCorsica was occasionally inhabited during the 9th-7th millennia BC, but the hu...
International audienceCorsica has been inhabited since the ninth millennium BC, but it is only from ...
International audienceThe arrival of early farmers and their livestock in the western Mediterranean ...
International audienceDuring the course of the diffusion of Neolithic agropastoral societies across ...
Sheep remains constitute the main archaeozoological evidence for the presence of Early Neolithic hum...
The beginning of husbandry in the Iberian Peninsula has been documented from the second half of the ...
The objective of this study is to contribute to a better definition of the technical system of the l...
International audienceThe importance of domestic caprine in the of medieval Provence (10th-15th cent...
We synthesise reported stable isotope values for domesticates and wild herbivores from sites spannin...
This paper investigates agricultural management choices of farmers at the Neolithic site of Kouphvou...
International audienceCorsica was occasionally inhabited during the 9th-7th millennia BC, but the hu...