Abstract

The stratigraphic sequence, archaeological content, and location of Cuze de Sainte-Anastasie (Cantal, France), also known as Cuze de Neussargue, makes the site of key importance for clarifying the cultural identities and mobility strategies of Laborian and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in the heart of the Massif Central. The re-evaluation of the site’s lithic assemblages presented here has the dual goal of integrating technological and economic behaviours of these human groups using different forms of evidence (petro-archaeological, techno-typological, functional) within the context of a general revision of the site’s archeostratigraphy. This approach also allows for a better understanding of previous assemblages (the Pierron and Rozoy collections) recovered from the site. The site is situated at 900 metres a. s. l. on the eastern slopes of the Cantalian Massif in the commune of Sainte-Anastasie (Cantal) and comprises two small, adjacent rockshelters developed in volcanic tuffs underlying a thick basalt flow forming an imposing 100 metre-high cliff. Discovered in 1945, subsequent excavations by R. Pierron, H. Derville and R. Rey, who concentrated on the southern rockshelter, identified a three-metre-thick succession of archaeological levels spanning the Mesolithic to Middle Ages. Two decades later, J.-G. Rozoy directed small-scale excavation in front of the rockshelter which yielded little archaeological material but better documented the lower levels identified by Pierron. Finally, A. Delpuech and P. Fernandes worked at the site between 1981 and 1985 following clandestine excavations. After disappointing results for the area in front of the southern rockshelter, work on the porch of the northern cave uncovered stratified Mesolithic and Late Palaeolithic occupations. In order to re-evaluate both the sequence and associated lithic material, we assembled a multi-disciplinary team as part of a project to produce a site monography.

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