Human settlement and vegetation-climate relationships in the Greenland Stadial 5 at the Piovesello site (Northern Apennines, Italy)

The Gravettian settlements of Europe are considered as an expression of human adaptation to harsh climates. In Southern Europe, however, favorable vegetation-climate conditions supported hunters-gatherer subsistence and the maintenance of their large-scale networks. This was also the case of the Nor...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quaternary Research
Main Authors: Marco Peresani, Cesare Ravazzi, Roberta Pini, Davide Margaritora, COCILOVA, Arianna, DELPIANO, Davide, Stefano Bertola, Lorenzo Castellano, Fabio Fogliazza, Gabriele Martino, Cristiano Nicosia, Patrick Simon
Other Authors: Peresani, Marco, Cesare, Ravazzi, Roberta, Pini, Margaritora, Davide, Cocilova, Arianna, Delpiano, Davide, Bertola, Stefano, Lorenzo, Castellano, Fabio, Fogliazza, Gabriele, Martino, Nicosia, Cristiano, Patrick, Simon
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11392/2396702
https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2018.76
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Summary:The Gravettian settlements of Europe are considered as an expression of human adaptation to harsh climates. In Southern Europe, however, favorable vegetation-climate conditions supported hunters-gatherer subsistence and the maintenance of their large-scale networks. This was also the case of the North-Adriatic plain and the Apennine mountain ridge in Italy. Traditionally considered lacking evidence, the northern part of the Apennine ridge has recently yielded the Early Gravettian site of Piovesello, located at 870 m a.s.l. Survey and excavation revealed lithic artifacts in primary position embedded in loamy sediments. Radiocarbon dating, anthracological and extended palynological and microcharcoal analyses have been integrated to reconstruct the palaeoecological context of this camp which was probably positioned above the timberline in an arid rocky landscape, bounding the fronts of local glaciers close to their maximum expansion at the time of Greenland Stadial (GS) 5 (32.04 - 28.9 ka cal BP). Human activity left ephemeral traces represented by lithic artefacts, charcoal, and the introduction of radiolarites from sources in proximity to the site and of chert from very far western sources. Evidence from Piovesello contributes to the reconstruction of human and vegetation ecology during Late Pleistocene glaciations and also provides hints for the historical biogeography of petrophytic plants and their orographic relics in the northern Apennine.