“…One of the richest areas for the study of European Mesolithic shellmound adaptations is the paleo‐estuary of the river Muge, a subsidiary of the main Tagus Valley in Portugal (e.g., Roche, , ; Rolão, Joaquinito, & Gonzaga, ; Bicho et al., ). The Muge shellmounds are extensive artificial mounds with a preferential bladelet and geometric microburin lithic technology (e.g., Bicho et al., ; Paixão, ), containing numerous human inhumations (e.g., Lubell et al., ; Jackes, Lubell, & Meiklejohn, ; Cunha, Cardoso, & Umbelino, ; Jackes & Meiklejohn, ; Rocksandic, ), dog and other faunal remains (Detry & Cardoso, ), and anthropogenic features such as pits, postholes, putative hut‐related features, and hearths (Arnaud, ; Roche, ; Corrêa, ; Bicho et al., , ). While these shellmounds have been the target of intensive research over the years (Cardoso & Rolão, ; Roche, , , , ; Rolão, ; Rolão, Joaquinito, & Gonzaga, ), detailed studies of processes responsible for the accumulation of the sediments remain sparse (see Gutiérrez‐Zugasti et al., ).…”