From Gravettian to Epigravettian in the Eastern Carpathians: Insights from the Bistricioara-Lutărie III archaeological site

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_815AFADB6F79
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
From Gravettian to Epigravettian in the Eastern Carpathians: Insights from the Bistricioara-Lutărie III archaeological site
Journal
Quaternary International
Author(s)
Anghelinu Mircea, Händel Marc, Niță Loredana, Cordoș Cristina, Veres Daniel, Hambach Ulrich, Murătoreanu George, Ciornei Alexandru, Schmidt Christoph, Sava Tiberiu, Mănăilescu Cristian, Ilie Maria, Demay Läetitia, Georgescu Valentin
ISSN
1040-6182
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
587-588
Pages
210-229
Language
english
Abstract
The Eastern Romanian Carpathians harbor a rich Upper Paleolithic archaeological record, mostly concentrated on the Bistrița river terraces. Despite extensive field research spanning decades, the regional archaeological record has long suffered from poor chronometric support and contradictory taxonomy.
The recently excavated spot at Bistricioara-Lutărie III, located in the Ceahlău Basin, brought a wealth of fresh chronostratigraphic and archaeological information, here summarized for the first time. The site preserves a thick (up to 9 m) sedimentary archive of mixed colluvial and aeolian origin, capping the fluvial gravel of a Bistrița terrace and likely extending back to Marine Isotope Stage 5. Six well preserved archaeological layers located in the upper part of the sequence were assigned to the Gravettian and Epigravettian technocomplexes. Earlier archaeological traces are indicated by presence of charcoals and burnt sediment, but have not yet been fully assessed.
BL III hosts a well preserved Late Gravettian layer with shouldered points dated to around 27 ka cal BP. The Epigravettian occupations starting at 24 ka cal BP provided rich lithic assemblages as well. The robustly dated sequence at BL III brings a major contribution to the understanding of the regional Upper Paleolithic cultural landscape across the Late Glacial Maximum. At the same time, exotic raw materials (Cretaceous flint, obsidian, radiolarites and cherts) pointing at extensive provisioning areas connect the Eastern Carpathian record to the wider East-Central European paleo-cultural dynamics.
Keywords
Eastern Carpathians, Chrono-stratigraphy, Gravettian, Epigravettian, Lithic variability
Create date
17/10/2020 19:29
Last modification date
11/07/2024 13:28
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