Mammalian turnover as an indicator of climatic and anthropogenic landscape modification: A new Meghalayan record (Late Holocene) in northern Iberia
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Climatic change Chalcolithic Bronze age Iron age Micromys minutus Mus musculus
Fecha
2023-03-01Referencia bibliográfica
A. Álvarez-Vena et al. Mammalian turnover as an indicator of climatic and anthropogenic landscape modification: A new Meghalayan record (Late Holocene) in northern Iberia. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 616 (2023) 111476[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2023.111476]
Patrocinador
ERC Consolidator Grant (SUBSILIENCE ref. 818299); Bilbao Port Authority (Autoridad Portuaria de Bilbao); Estabilización del sector occidental de la Cantera de Punta Lucero en el Puerto de BilbaoResumen
The Punta Lucero III cave is a natural trap where abundant vertebrate remains were accumulated during the
Meghalayan (Late Holocene). To better understand the paleoenvironmental conditions in which this record was
accumulated, the micromammal assemblage, comprising a minimum number of 1396 individuals belonging to
19 taxa, was studied using the Mutual Ecogeographic Range and the Habitat Weighting Method. Throughout
~2600 years, the micromammal community's quick turnover reflected a shift from patchy forests and humid
meadows to open, shrubbier grasslands. The Late Holocene Thermal Maximum's humid and mild climatic conditions
underwent a cooling and aridification phase, coeval with the Iron Age Cold Epoch. These concluded in a
slight temperature rising, coeval with the Roman Warm Period. Macromammals experienced a shift from wild
populations to domestic herds. Therefore, this work discusses a broader context for this mammalian turnover
from a human cultural perspective