Variation in Lithic Technological Strategies among the Neanderthals of Gibraltar |
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Authors: | Ceri Shipton Christopher Clarkson Marco Antonio Bernal Nicole Boivin Clive Finlayson Geraldine Finlayson Darren Fa Francisco Giles Pacheco Michael Petraglia |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.; 2. The Gibraltar Caves Project, Gibraltar Museum, Gibraltar.; 3. School of Archaeology, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom.; 4. Department of Social Sciences, University of Toronto at Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.; Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona and University of York, Spain, |
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Abstract: | The evidence for Neanderthal lithic technology is reviewed and summarized for four caves on The Rock of Gibraltar: Vanguard, Beefsteak, Ibex and Gorham’s. Some of the observed patterns in technology are statistically tested including raw material selection, platform preparation, and the use of formal and expedient technological schemas. The main parameters of technological variation are examined through detailed analysis of the Gibraltar cores and comparison with samples from the classic Mousterian sites of Le Moustier and Tabun C. The Gibraltar Mousterian, including the youngest assemblage from Layer IV of Gorham’s Cave, spans the typical Middle Palaeolithic range of variation from radial Levallois to unidirectional and multi-platform flaking schemas, with characteristic emphasis on the former. A diachronic pattern of change in the Gorham’s Cave sequence is documented, with the younger assemblages utilising more localized raw material and less formal flaking procedures. We attribute this change to a reduction in residential mobility as the climate deteriorated during Marine Isotope Stage 3 and the Neanderthal population contracted into a refugium. |
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