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245 0 0 _aInterconnected Magdalenian societies as revealed by the circulation of whale bone artefacts in the Pyreneo-Cantabrian region /
_cAlexandre Lefebvre, Ana Belén Marín-Arroyo, E. Álvarez-Fernández, M. De la Rasilla Vives, E. Durate Matías, Marian Cueto, Jexux Tapia, Eduardo Berganza, Jean Marc Pétillon.
260 _a[S.l.]:
_bElsevier,
_c2020
336 _atexto (visual)
337 _3en línea
_aelectrónico
506 _aRestringido
520 _aCoastal adaptations of Palaeolithic foragers along the north Atlantic seaboard have received renewed attention in the last decade and include growing evidence for exploitation of whale bone by Late Glacial Magdalenian groups to the north of the Pyrenees. Here we present a systematic revision of Magdalenian osseous industries from the Cantabrian region designed to explore whether this phenomenon was more widely shared by hunter-gatherer groups along the Atlantic coast of the northern Iberian Peninsula. Fifty-four whale bone objects were identified from 12 of the 64 sampled sites. Essentially represented by large, finished weapon elements (projectile points), these objects are primarily associated with the middle phase of the Cantabrian Magdalenian, and overlap slightly with the beginning its upper and probably the end of its lower phases. More broadly, the circulation of these objects evinces regular, long-distance (ca. 600 km) communication networks operating on both sides of the current French and Spanish Basque Country between 17.8 and 15 cal ka BP. The structure of this network poses interesting questions concerning potential social and/or economic interactions between Magdalenian groups from the Pyrenees and neighbouring Cantabrian region. We suggest that the use of whale bone by these particularly mobile hunter-gatherer groups for the production of hunting weapons was connected to the longer use-life afforded by the large size of this particular raw material. This choice potentially reflects attempts to offset raw material transport costs by privileging their regular maintenance rather than the replacement of hunting weaponry. This growing body of evidence for the exploitation of marine resources during the Magdalenian further reinforces the Bay of Biscay being the backdrop to the emergence of the first regular, diversified and organized coastal economies at the end of the Last Glaciation.
524 _aLefebvre, A., Marín-Arroyo, A. B., Álvarez-Fernández, E., De la Rasilla Vives, M., Durate Matías, E., Cueto, M., Tapia, J., Berganza, E., Pétillon, J.-M., 2020. “Interconnected Magdalenian societies as revealed by the circulation of whale bone artefacts in the Pyreneo-Cantabrian region”. Quaternary Science reviews 251(1), 106692. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascierev.2020.106692.
591 _aARQUEOLOGIAPREHISTORICA
592 _aARQUEOLOGIA
650 _aTecnología ósea
_91437179
650 _aPaleolítico superior tardío
_91437180
650 _aAdaptaciones costeras
_91437181
650 _aRedes de comunicación
_91437182
651 _aAtlántico norte
_91437183
651 _a Sudoeste de Europa
_91437184
655 _aArtículo científico
_99312
700 1 _91436443
_aLefebvre, Alexandre
700 1 _9825654
_aMarín Arroyo, Ana Belén
_d1977-
700 1 _910069
_aAlvarez-Fernandez, E.
700 1 _9255334
_aRasilla Vives, Marco de la
700 1 _aDurate Matías, E.
_91437185
700 1 _91094095
_aCueto, Marián
700 1 _910043
_aTapia Sagarna, Jesus
_d1973-
700 1 _9456450
_aBerganza, Eduardo
_d1946-
700 1 _91425275
_aPetillon, Jean-Marc
710 2 _aAranzadi Zientzia Elkartea
_eFIRMA
_91437186
856 _uhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277379120306545#!
942 _2cdu
_cPUBL