Last Glacial Human Settlement in Eastern Cantabria (Northern Spain)

  1. Straus, L.G. 3
  2. González Morales, M.R. 1
  3. Martínez, M.A.F. 1
  4. García-Gelabert, M.P. 2
  1. 1 Universidad de Cantabria
    info

    Universidad de Cantabria

    Santander, España

    ROR https://ror.org/046ffzj20

  2. 2 Universitat de València
    info

    Universitat de València

    Valencia, España

    ROR https://ror.org/043nxc105

  3. 3 University of New Mexico
    info

    University of New Mexico

    Albuquerque, Estados Unidos

    ROR https://ror.org/05fs6jp91

Revista:
Journal of Archaeological Science

ISSN: 0305-4403

Año de publicación: 2002

Volumen: 29

Número: 29

Páginas: 1403-1414

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1006/JASC.2001.0800 SCOPUS: 2-s2.0-0036887414 GOOGLE SCHOLAR

Otras publicaciones en: Journal of Archaeological Science

Repositorio institucional: lock_openAcceso abierto Editor

Resumen

While the excavation of individual sites remains fundamental to the creation of the Palaeolithic archeological record, increasingly the focus of prehistoric research is on human adaptations to and within natural regions. Such a reorientation implies viewing sites and occupations as samples of different suites of activities in various habitats across space and time; it is dependent on the use of radiocarbon to date and relate occupation residues among sites; and it necessitates the application of methods to uncover patterns of human mobility as an integral aspect of subsistence economy, demographic arrangements and social relations. This paper contributes to the regional study of Last Glacial foragers by presenting preliminary aspects of a case study from the Asón River basin in eastern Cantabria. Assembled here are data from several recent and a few older excavations in sites distributed between the present shore of the Bay of Biscay and the uplands of the Cantabrian Cordillera. The main sites are El Otero, La Chora, La Fragua and El Perro near or at the present mouth of the river, the classic cave of El Valle in the mid-valley, and El Mirón and El Horno near the cave art loci of Covalanas, La Haza and Cullalvera in the upper valley. While the highest density of known sites in the whole drainage area occurs during the Magdalenian and Azilian periods (17-10 kya), there is evidence for substantial abandonment of the montane interior during the Mesolithic, when human settlement was concentrated around the estuary of the Asón, after which time the whole valley was repopulated in the Neolithic. © 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.