Late Pleistocene Neanderthal exploitation of stable and mosaic ecosystems in northern Iberia shown by multi-isotope evidence
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Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10902/32346DOI: 10.1017/qua.2023.32
ISSN: 0033-5894
ISSN: 1096-0287
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Pederzani, Sarah; Britton, Kate; Jones, Jennifer Rose; Agudo Pérez, Lucía


Fecha
2023Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International © University of Washington. 2023. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license
Publicado en
Quaternary Research, 2023, 116, 108-132
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Middle Palaeolithic
MIS 3
Archaeozoology
Cantabria
Palaeoclimatology
Palaeoecology
Tooth enamel
Bone collagen
Resumen/Abstract
During the last glacial period, rapidly changing environments posed substantial challenges to Neanderthal populations in Europe. Southern continental regions, such as Iberia, have been proposed as important climatic "buffer" zones during glacial phases. Contextualising the climatic and ecological conditions Neanderthals faced is relevant to interpreting their resilience. However, records of the environments and ecosystems they exploited across Iberia exhibit temporal and spatial gaps in coverage. Here we provide new evidence for palaeotemper atures, vegetation structure, and prey herbivore ecology during the late Pleistocene (MIS 5-3) in northern Spain, by applying multiple stable isotope tracers (ɗ¹⁸O, ɗ¹³C, ɗ¹⁵N, ɗ³⁴S) to herbivore skeletal remains associated with Neanderthal occupations at Axlor Cave, Bizkaia. The results show little change over time and indicate stable climatic conditions and ecosystems across different occupations. Large within-layer isotopic variability in nitrogen and sulphur suggests the presence of a mosaic environment and a variety of isotopic ecotones that were exploited by Neanderthals and their prey. We implement a combination of carbonate and phosphate ɗ¹⁸O measurements to estimate palaeotemperatures using a cost-effective workflow. We show that the targeted use of phosphate ɗ¹⁸O measurements to anchor summer peak and winter trough areas enables high-precision seasonal palaeoclimatic reconstructions.
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