Articles producció científicaHistòria i Història de l'Art

The Technological Behaviours of Homo antecessor: Core Management and Reduction Intensity at Gran Dolina-TD6.2 (Atapuerca, Spain)

  • Identification data

    Identifier:  imarina:9282074
    Authors:  Lombao, Diego; Rabunal, Jose Ramon; Morales, Juan Ignacio; Olle, Andreu; Carbonell, Eudald; Mosquera, Marina
    Abstract:
    The ability of early hominins to overcome the constraints imposed by the characteristics of raw materials used for stone tool production is a key topic on the discussion about the evolution of hominin cognitive capabilities and technical behaviours. Thus, technological variability has been the centrepiece on this debate. However, the variability of lithic assemblages cannot be correctly interpreted without understanding site occupational models and function and considering that individual tools represent specific discard moments in a continuous reduction process. In Europe, the earliest technological record is represented by the scarce and scattered Mode 1 technologies, often deriving from occasional occupations or restricted activity areas yielding unrepresentative assemblages. In this paper, we approach the technological behaviours exhibited by Lower Palaeolithic hominins from the subunit TD6.2 of the Gran Dolina site (Atapuerca, Burgos) by including the perspective of reduction intensity studies on the analysis of technological variability. Gran Dolina TD6.2 is a unique and extremely significant archaeological context, as it represents the oldest multi-layered unit of domestic hominin occupations in the Early Pleistocene of Europe. We use the Volumetric Reconstruction Method (VRM) to estimate the original volume of the blanks and quantify the reduction intensity of each core individually to characterise the reduction distribution patterns using Weibull probability distribution functions. Our results suggest differential raw material management in terms of reduction intensity, according to the characteristics of each lithology. This could reflect a solid understanding of raw material qualities and a certain degree of planning. Altogether, the continuity between knapping strategies through reduction denotes constant adaptation to raw material constraints as well as particular knapping conditions, rather than specific compartmentalised mental schemes. In conclusion, Homo antecessor toolmakers would have been situational knappers whose technological behaviour would be highly adaptive. This research constitutes the first reduction approach for the European Early Pleistocene assemblages that will lead to a referential framework for other European Early Pleistocene sites.
  • Others:

    Link to the original source: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10816-022-09579-1
    APA: Lombao, Diego; Rabunal, Jose Ramon; Morales, Juan Ignacio; Olle, Andreu; Carbonell, Eudald; Mosquera, Marina (2023). The Technological Behaviours of Homo antecessor: Core Management and Reduction Intensity at Gran Dolina-TD6.2 (Atapuerca, Spain). Journal Of Archaeological Method And Theory, 30(3), 964-1001. DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/tez2y
    Paper original source: Journal Of Archaeological Method And Theory. 30 (3): 964-1001
    Article's DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/tez2y
    Journal publication year: 2023
    Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Paper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
    Record's date: 2025-01-08
    URV's Author/s: Carbonell Roura, Eudald / Lombao Vázquez, Diego / Mosquera Martínez, Marina / Ollé Cañellas, Andreu
    Department: Història i Història de l'Art
    Licence document URL: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
    Publication Type: Journal Publications
    Author, as appears in the article.: Lombao, Diego; Rabunal, Jose Ramon; Morales, Juan Ignacio; Olle, Andreu; Carbonell, Eudald; Mosquera, Marina
    licence for use: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
    Thematic Areas: Historia, Ciencias sociales, Ciencias humanas, Archeology (arts and humanities), Archeology, Archaeology, Antropologia / arqueologia, Anthropology
    Author's mail: diego.lombao@estudiants.urv.cat, eudald.carbonell@urv.cat, marina.mosquera@urv.cat, andreu.olle@urv.cat
  • Keywords:

    West turkana
    Weibull distribution
    Tool reduction
    Technological behaviour
    Sierra-de-atapuerca
    Reduction intensity
    Raw-material selectivity
    Material quality
    Lower pleistocene
    Lithic technology
    Lithic assemblages
    Hominin settlements
    Early pleistocene
    Cores
    Cave sediments
    Archaeological site
    Anthropology
    Archaeology
    Archeology
    Archeology (Arts and Humanities)
    Historia
    Ciencias sociales
    Ciencias humanas
    Antropologia / arqueologia
  • Documents:

  • Cerca a google

    Search to google scholar