Greening a lost world: paleoartistic investigations of the early Pleistocene vegetation landscape in the first Europeans' homeland
Ver/ Abrir
Registro completo
Mostrar el registro completo DCAutoría
Carrión, José; Amorós, Gabriela; Sánchez Giner, María Victoria; Amorós, Ariadna; Ochando, Juan; Munuera, Manuel; Marín Arroyo, Ana Belén
Fecha
2024Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. T
Publicado en
Quaternary Science Advances, 2024, 14, 100185
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Paleoart
Paleoecology
Paleontology
Paleobotany
Pleistocene
Human evolution
Orce
Resumen/Abstract
The scarcity of pictorial reconstructions focusing on Quaternary flora and vegetation prompts a reevaluation of traditional zoocentrism in future paleoartistic research. Here we present paleoartistic renderings depicting vegetation landscapes around the Orce Archaeological Zone (OAZ), encompassing sites dating from 1.6 to 1.2 million years ago during the Early Pleistocene of the Guadix-Baza Basin in southern Spain. Four pieces are based on fossil pollen data from Venta Micena 1 (VM1), Barranco León (BL), and Fuente Nueva 3 (FN3). The artwork considers altitudinal belt distribution, taxonomic and structural diversity, extinct taxa in the Iberian Peninsula post-Early Pleistocene, and those previously extinct at higher latitudes in Europe. This essay visually represents the coexistence of mesophytic, thermophytic, and xerophytic plant communities within a glacial refugium of woody species. Lastly, employing a non-conventional iconographic approach, we portray a female Homo individual in the forest refugium to draw up on possible adaptive traits of these early Europeans.
Colecciones a las que pertenece
- D04 Artículos [362]
- D04 Proyectos de investigación [193]