2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10963-016-9091-2
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Re-evaluating the Neolithic: The Impact and the Consolidation of Farming Practices in the Cantabrian Region (Northern Spain)

Abstract: Research projects undertaken in the Cantabrian region since 1980 have produced new, high-quality information about the neolithisation process(es) in this area. It is now necessary to review this archaeological information and test the main hypotheses put forward to explain it. This paper presents an update on the archaeological evidence (sites, chronological dates, archaeozoological, archaeobotanical and technological information) for the early Neolithic in the Cantabrian region. It summarizes recent research … Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…3) suggests a gradual increase in human activity from 8500 to 6000 cal BP and a statistically significant 2σ deviation beyond the general linear model c. 7900-7700 cal BP. Furthermore, this peak only affected a relatively short time period and probably resulted from the aggregation of Mesolithic communities in the western part of this study area (Fano 1998;Arias 2007;Fernández López and Gómez Puche 2009;Fano et al 2015;Cubas et al 2016). This early peak in human activity during the Mesolithic in northern Iberia corresponds, curiously, to the most severe climatic perturbation in the Holocene since the Younger Dryas (Dansgaard 1987;1997;López Sáez et al 2008) and has no parallel in other Iberian regions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…3) suggests a gradual increase in human activity from 8500 to 6000 cal BP and a statistically significant 2σ deviation beyond the general linear model c. 7900-7700 cal BP. Furthermore, this peak only affected a relatively short time period and probably resulted from the aggregation of Mesolithic communities in the western part of this study area (Fano 1998;Arias 2007;Fernández López and Gómez Puche 2009;Fano et al 2015;Cubas et al 2016). This early peak in human activity during the Mesolithic in northern Iberia corresponds, curiously, to the most severe climatic perturbation in the Holocene since the Younger Dryas (Dansgaard 1987;1997;López Sáez et al 2008) and has no parallel in other Iberian regions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…However, a substantial degree of subregional variability during the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in Iberia has also been spotlighted (Bernabeu Aubán et al 2014, p. 223;Balsera et al 2015a, p. 154). A case in point is the Cantabrian strip; a recent review of radiocarbon dates suggests diverse spatio-temporal dynamics for the spread of the Neolithic in the fifth millennium cal BC, being quicker in its eastern sector (Fano et al 2015;Cubas et al 2016). As a way to evaluate such claims, this paper examines inter-regional dynamics in Iberia deploying alternative analytical units at larger scales.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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