The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia

Reconstruction of Pleistocene environments and processes in the sensitive geographical location of westernmost Iberia, facing the North Atlantic Ocean, is crucial for understanding impacts on early human communities. We provide a characterization of the lowest terrace (T6) of the Lower Tejo River, a...

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Published in:Quaternary
Main Authors: Pedro P. Cunha, António A. Martins, Jan-Pieter Buylaert, Andrew S. Murray, Maria P. Gouveia, Eric Font, Telmo Pereira, Silvério Figueiredo, Cristiana Ferreira, David R. Bridgland, Pu Yang, José C. Stevaux, Rui Mota
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/quat2010003
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2571-550X/2/1/3/ 2023-08-20T04:08:32+02:00 The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia Pedro P. Cunha António A. Martins Jan-Pieter Buylaert Andrew S. Murray Maria P. Gouveia Eric Font Telmo Pereira Silvério Figueiredo Cristiana Ferreira David R. Bridgland Pu Yang José C. Stevaux Rui Mota agris 2019-01-18 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/quat2010003 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/quat2010003 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Quaternary; Volume 2; Issue 1; Pages: 3 OSL dating river terraces Late Pleistocene environmental change western Iberia Text 2019 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/quat2010003 2023-07-31T21:58:57Z Reconstruction of Pleistocene environments and processes in the sensitive geographical location of westernmost Iberia, facing the North Atlantic Ocean, is crucial for understanding impacts on early human communities. We provide a characterization of the lowest terrace (T6) of the Lower Tejo River, at Vila Velha de Ródão (eastern central Portugal). This terrace comprises a lower gravel bed and an upper division consisting of fine to very fine sands and coarse silts. We have used a multidisciplinary approach, combining geomorphology, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, grain-size analysis and rock magnetism measurement, in order to provide new insights into the environmental changes coincident with the activity of the last Neanderthals in this region. In addition, we conducted palynological analysis, X-ray diffraction measurement and scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive spectra of the clay fraction and carbonate concretions. We discuss these new findings in the context of previously published palaeontological and archeological data. The widespread occurrence of carbonate concretions and rizoliths in the T6 profile is evidence for episodic pedogenic evaporation, in agreement with the rare occurrence and poor preservation of phytoliths. We provide updated OSL ages for the lower two Tejo terraces, obtained by post infra-red stimulated luminescence: (i) T5 is c. 140 to 70 ka; (ii) T6 is c. 60 to 35 ka. The single archaeological and fossiliferous level located at the base of the T6 upper division, recording the last regional occurrence of megafauna (elephant and rhinoceros) and Mousterian artefacts, is now dated at 44 ± 3 ka. With reference to the arrival of Neanderthals in the region, probably by way of the Tejo valley (from central Iberia), new dating suggests a probable age of 200–170 ka for the earliest Mousterian industry located in the topmost deposits of T4. Text North Atlantic MDPI Open Access Publishing Quaternary 2 1 3
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic OSL dating
river terraces
Late Pleistocene
environmental change
western Iberia
spellingShingle OSL dating
river terraces
Late Pleistocene
environmental change
western Iberia
Pedro P. Cunha
António A. Martins
Jan-Pieter Buylaert
Andrew S. Murray
Maria P. Gouveia
Eric Font
Telmo Pereira
Silvério Figueiredo
Cristiana Ferreira
David R. Bridgland
Pu Yang
José C. Stevaux
Rui Mota
The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
topic_facet OSL dating
river terraces
Late Pleistocene
environmental change
western Iberia
description Reconstruction of Pleistocene environments and processes in the sensitive geographical location of westernmost Iberia, facing the North Atlantic Ocean, is crucial for understanding impacts on early human communities. We provide a characterization of the lowest terrace (T6) of the Lower Tejo River, at Vila Velha de Ródão (eastern central Portugal). This terrace comprises a lower gravel bed and an upper division consisting of fine to very fine sands and coarse silts. We have used a multidisciplinary approach, combining geomorphology, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, grain-size analysis and rock magnetism measurement, in order to provide new insights into the environmental changes coincident with the activity of the last Neanderthals in this region. In addition, we conducted palynological analysis, X-ray diffraction measurement and scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive spectra of the clay fraction and carbonate concretions. We discuss these new findings in the context of previously published palaeontological and archeological data. The widespread occurrence of carbonate concretions and rizoliths in the T6 profile is evidence for episodic pedogenic evaporation, in agreement with the rare occurrence and poor preservation of phytoliths. We provide updated OSL ages for the lower two Tejo terraces, obtained by post infra-red stimulated luminescence: (i) T5 is c. 140 to 70 ka; (ii) T6 is c. 60 to 35 ka. The single archaeological and fossiliferous level located at the base of the T6 upper division, recording the last regional occurrence of megafauna (elephant and rhinoceros) and Mousterian artefacts, is now dated at 44 ± 3 ka. With reference to the arrival of Neanderthals in the region, probably by way of the Tejo valley (from central Iberia), new dating suggests a probable age of 200–170 ka for the earliest Mousterian industry located in the topmost deposits of T4.
format Text
author Pedro P. Cunha
António A. Martins
Jan-Pieter Buylaert
Andrew S. Murray
Maria P. Gouveia
Eric Font
Telmo Pereira
Silvério Figueiredo
Cristiana Ferreira
David R. Bridgland
Pu Yang
José C. Stevaux
Rui Mota
author_facet Pedro P. Cunha
António A. Martins
Jan-Pieter Buylaert
Andrew S. Murray
Maria P. Gouveia
Eric Font
Telmo Pereira
Silvério Figueiredo
Cristiana Ferreira
David R. Bridgland
Pu Yang
José C. Stevaux
Rui Mota
author_sort Pedro P. Cunha
title The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
title_short The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
title_full The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
title_fullStr The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
title_full_unstemmed The Lowermost Tejo River Terrace at Foz do Enxarrique, Portugal: A Palaeoenvironmental Archive from c. 60–35 ka and Its Implications for the Last Neanderthals in Westernmost Iberia
title_sort lowermost tejo river terrace at foz do enxarrique, portugal: a palaeoenvironmental archive from c. 60–35 ka and its implications for the last neanderthals in westernmost iberia
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.3390/quat2010003
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op_source Quaternary; Volume 2; Issue 1; Pages: 3
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