Abstract

Middle Paleolithic lithic and faunal assemblages throughout Eurasia reflect short-term Neanderthal occupations, which suggest high group mobility. However, the timing of these short-term occupations, a key factor to assess group mobility and territorial range, remains unresolved. Anthropogenic combustion structures are prominent in the Middle Paleolithic record and conceal information on the timing and intensity and natural setting of their associated human occupations. This paper examines a concentration of eleven combustion structures from unit Xb of El Salt, a Middle Paleolithic site in Spain through a geoarchaeological approach, in search of temporal, human impact and paleoenvironmental indicators to assess the timing, intensity and natural setting of the associated human occupations. The study was conducted using micromorphology, lipid biomarker analysis and compound specific isotope analysis. Results show in situ hearths built on different diachronic topsoils rich in herbivore excrements and angiosperm plant residues with rare anthropogenic remains. These data are suggestive of low impact, short-term human occupations separated by relatively long periods of time, with possible indicators of seasonality. Results also show an absence of conifer biomarkers in the mentioned topsoils and presence of conifer charcoal among the fuel residues (ash), indicating that fire wood was brought to the site from elsewhere. A microscopic and molecular approach in the study of combustion structures allows us to narrow down the timescale of archaeological analysis and contributes valuable information towards an understanding of Neanderthal group mobility and settlement patterns.

Highlights

  • What is the approximate amount of time that Neanderthal groups occupied any given place in the landscape? How much time passed before they returned to that same place? These questions are key to understand Neanderthal group mobility and settlement patterns.So far, these questions have not been properly answered using the current proxies used in Middle Paleolithic archaeology.Some proxies are especially helpful for distinguishing broadly between long-term and short-term occupations

  • We present the results of a geoarchaeological study coupling micromorphology and lipid biomarker analysis of a combustion structure assemblage from El Salt unit Xb to explore how these combustion structures formed

  • Ephemeral signs of human activity were found in the whiteish layer (WL) microscopically. On this basis and focusing on the relative stratigraphic position of the four superimposed, diachronic combustion features from the outer area (H50, H53b, H53a, H52), we propose that the unit Xb combustion structure assemblage represents at least 4 low-impact human occupation episodes separated by unknown periods of time during which the place was not occupied by humans

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Summary

Introduction

What is the approximate amount of time that Neanderthal groups occupied any given place in the landscape? How much time passed before they returned to that same place? These questions are key to understand Neanderthal group mobility and settlement patterns.So far, these questions have not been properly answered using the current proxies used in Middle Paleolithic archaeology.Some proxies are especially helpful for distinguishing broadly between long-term and short-term occupations. These questions are key to understand Neanderthal group mobility and settlement patterns These questions have not been properly answered using the current proxies used in Middle Paleolithic archaeology. Carnivore activity on the faunal assemblages might indicate short term occupations, since leftover bones would still be fresh and more appealing to carnivores [1,16]. Another method that has been used to frame the timing of human occupations in archaeological context is dental wear analysis which looks at seasonal markers in anthropogenic tooth remains to identify the season in which the animal has died. A stratigraphic unit with several teeth representing the same season commonly imply different, diachronic shortterm seasonal occupations [17,18]

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