Programme > Par auteur > Nadal Jordi

Habitat and ecology of red deer and horse from the high-altitude site of Montlléo (Catalonia, Spain) during the Magdalenian
Dorothée Drucker  1, *@  , Ruth Rey, Jordi Nadal  2  , Lluís Lloveras  3, 4@  , Marta Sánchez De La Torre  5  , Josep Maria Fullola  6@  , Xavier Mangado  6, *@  
1 : University of Tübingen  -  Site web
2 : GRAMP-UAB, Dept. Geografia, Edifici B - Fac. Filosofia i Lletres, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès (Barcelona) -  Espagne
3 : Departament de Ciència Animal, Escola Tècnica Superior d'Enginyeria Agrària, Universitat de Lleida
Avinguda Rovira Roure 191, 25198 Lleida -  Espagne
4 : Seminari d'Estudis i Recerques Prehistòriques, Departament de Prehistòria, Història Antiga i Arqueologia, Universitat de Barcelona
Montalegre 6-8, 08001 Barcelona -  Espagne
5 : Seminari d'Estudis i Recerques Prehistòriques (SERP), Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
6 : SERP - Universitat de Barcelona
C/ Montalegre 6-8. 08001 Barcelona -  Espagne
* : Auteur correspondant

Montlléo is an open-air site located in the Cerdanya valley in the Pyrenees close to the river Segre and at 1134 m above sea level. Excavated since 2000 by the SERP team of the University of Barcelona, the site revealed an early Magdalenian occupation dated between 16,900 and 15,400 years BP (ca. 20,400-18,700 cal BP) coeval to the GS-2a phase, as well as a previous phase in the Final Solutrean around 18,800 years BP (ca. 22,800 cal BP; Mangado et al., 2019). The archeological investigation exposed a large range of lithic artefacts made of raw material of different origins, north and south of the mountains (Sánchez de la Torre et al., 2019), and introduced in the site as bulk or pre-formed shape (Fullola et al., 2012). Perforated molluscs of both Mediterranean and Atlantic origins confirm the strategic position of the site on a north-south and west-east raw material transit (Mangado et al., 2014). Faunal remains are dominated by horse (Equus sp.), red deer (Cervus elaphus) and small bovids (Rupicapra rupicapra and Capra pyrenaica), while rabbit is also represented (Mangado et al., 2015). Horse and red deer were likely the main source of meat for the early Magdalenian hunter-gatherers of Montlléo who may have exploited the position of the site to exploit both lower and upper parts of the Segre valley (Mas et al., 2018).

In this communication, we aim at reconstructing the diet and habitat of horse and red deer found from the Magdalenian occupation at Montlléo through isotopic investigation. We have conducted intra-individual sampling of enamel along molar teeth and measure the relative abundance of 13C and 18O in carbonate. The results should provide information on seasonal variation in diet and environment experienced by both species. In parallel, bones of horse and red deer were selected to extract collagen and perform 13C and 15N analysis. Bone collagen remodels over the life of the specimens and provides thus long-term information on diet and habitat of the animals. We will examine the possible niche partitioning between horse and red deer and potential differences in their habitat which will give insights into the hunting strategy of the Magdalenian human groups in mountainous areas.

 

Fullola, J.M., et al. 2012. The Magdalenian in Catalonia (northeast Iberia). Quaternary International272, pp.55-74.

Mangado, X., et al. 2014. Silex et coquillages. Approche à l'identification des territoires socioéconomiques des Magdaléniens du versant sud des Pyrénées catalans. Modes de contacts et de déplacements au Paléolithique eurasiatique, pp.473-489.

Mangado, X., et al. 2015. Montlleó (Prats i Sansor, Cerdanya). Balanç de 10 campanyes d'excavació.

Mangado, X., et al. 2017, April. Les occupations humaines sur le sitede plein air du Paléolithiquesupérieur de Montlleó (Prats iSansor, Lérida, Espagne): nouvellesdonnées. In «circulations montagnardes, circulations européennes» 142e colloque du CTHS.

Mas, B., et al. 2018. Settlement patterns during the Magdalenian in the south-eastern Pyrenees, Iberian Peninsula. A territorial study based on GIS. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports22, pp.237-247.

Sánchez de la Torre, M., et al. 2019. Crossing the Pyrenees during the Late Glacial Maximum. The use of geochemistry to trace past human mobility. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology56, p.101105.

 

 



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