Abstract

Abstract The goal of this article is to discuss the significance of the archaeological evidence from the sites of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain) and Coves del Fem (Ulldemolins, Spain), in the context of the neolithisation of Northeastern Iberia. The 14C dates have been analysed using Bayesian statistics. The stratigraphy of Coves del Fem covers the transition between the last hunter–gatherers of the region and the first farmers. The chronological sequence covers approximately 1,300 years, from 6065–5990 cal BC to 4700–4550 cal BC. The site of La Draga was occupied by the first farmers circa 5300–5230 cal BC when a wooden platform was constructed and first used. Subsequent repairs of the wooden piles have been dated as well. Another use of the wooden platform is documented around 5200–5085 cal BC, although until now new construction evidence has not been documented. La Draga site was reoccupied later, when several travertine structures dated in two moments between the years 5100–4900 cal BC and 4950–4700 cal BC were constructed and used. The radiocarbon dates of Coves del Fem and La Draga support the existence of two different models of neolithisation in Northeastern Iberia. In the southern part of the territory, Coves del Fem suggests that the Holocene hunter–gatherer populations remained in the area until the arrival of the first farmers, in a model similar to the one observed at the Ebro basin. On the contrary, the site of La Draga supports the hypothesis of the first farmers colonising a previously unoccupied territory.

Highlights

  • The goal of this article is to discuss the significance of the archaeological evidence from the sites of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain) and Coves del Fem (Ulldemolins, Spain), in the context of the neolithisation of Northeastern Iberia

  • Due to the lack of 14C dates corresponding to the first half of the sixth millennium cal BC and the availability of very few corresponding to the second half of the seventh millennium cal BC, it has been proposed that a period of non-occupation preceded the arrival of the first farming communities at the northeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula

  • The 14C dates obtained from short live samples from La Draga and Coves del Fem are analysed in the frame of the early Neolithic dates of the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of this article is to discuss the significance of the archaeological evidence from the sites of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain) and Coves del Fem (Ulldemolins, Spain), in the context of the neolithisation of Northeastern Iberia. The first site, Cova del Vidre, has a layer with geometric Mesolithic evidence, whilst the other two sites are characterised by the presence of the socalled notch and denticulate lithic industry These deposits are separated for more than 500 years from the first Neolithic populations, as the first evidence of Neolithic societies in the area appears in the middle of the sixth millennium cal BC (Morales & Oms, 2012; Morales, Fontanals, Oms, & Verges, 2010; Oms et al, 2016; Oms, Terradas, Morell, & Gibaja, 2018; Vaquero & Garcia-Argüelles, 2009). The recently excavated site of Coves del Fem has provided evidence of an occupational sequence that covers all of the sixth millennium cal BC, suggesting that the area was one of the last hunter–gatherer shelter and one of the earliest Neolithic occupation in the region These two sites suggest that the neolithisation model had different dynamics between the northern and the southern parts of the region. The low signal of early farmers’ occupation in the region according to the recent dendrochronological results from the site of La Draga is discussed

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