Paleoeconom?a y subsistencia durante el Pleistoceno medio en el sur de Iberia: Zooarqueolog?a y tafonom?a de la Cueva del ?ngel (Lucena, C?rdoba) - Paperback by Books by splitShops
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Paleoeconom?a y subsistencia durante el Pleistoceno medio en el sur de Iberia: Zooarqueolog?a y tafonom?a de la Cueva del ?ngel (Lucena, C?rdoba) - Paperback by Books by splitShops is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Paleoeconom?a y subsistencia durante el Pleistoceno medio en el sur de Iberia: Zooarqueolog?a y tafonom?a de la Cueva del ?ngel (Lucena, C?rdoba) - Paperback by Books by splitShops
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by Jos? Antonio Solano Garcia (Author)
Tradicionalmente, las sociedades preneandertales del Pleistoceno Medio se han caracterizado a menudo como poco desarrolladas, con estrategias de subsistencia muy r?gidas y est?ticas, centradas en la adquisici?n de presas monoespec?ficas de grandes herb?voros y en el carro?eo regular. Sin embargo, durante la segunda mitad del Pleistoceno medio, con la emergencia del uso del fuego en la Europa mediterr?nea, se produjo un cambio hacia estrategias m?s flexibles y din?micas, casi m?s propias de los humanos anat?micamente modernos. La cueva del ?ngel (Lucena, Espa?a) ejemplifica esta tendencia, revelando a trav?s del an?lisis zooarqueol?gico y tafon?mico un mecanismo de intrincada amplificaci?n econ?mica. Este mecanismo, que combina estrategias de subsistencia tradicionales con innovadoras, desempe?? probablemente un papel crucial en el mantenimiento de la cohesi?n social dentro del grupo y en el equilibrio de los factores de riesgo. A lo largo de miles de a?os, estos grupos humanos del sur de Europa demostraron resiliencia y adaptabilidad frente a una importante variabilidad clim?tica entre hace 350.000 y 100.000 a?os.
Traditionally, Middle Pleistocene pre-Neanderthal societies have often been characterized as underdeveloped, with highly rigid and static subsistence strategies focused on acquiring monospecific prey of large herbivores and regular scavenging. However, during the latter half of the Middle Pleistocene, with the emergence of fire use in Mediterranean Europe, a shift towards more flexible and dynamic strategies, reminiscent of anatomically modern humans, occurred. The Cave of the Angel (Lucena, Spain) exemplifies this trend, revealing through zooarchaeological and taphonomic analysis an intricate mechanism of economic amplification. This mechanism, combining traditional subsistence strategies with innovative ones, likely played a crucial role in maintaining social cohesion within the group and balancing risk factors. Over thousands of years, these human groups in southern Europe demonstrated resilience and adaptability in the face of significant climatic variability between 350,000 and 100,000 years ago.
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