Títol
Testing micro-regional variability in the Holocene shaping of high mountain cultural landscapes: a palaeoenvironmental case-study in the eastern Pyrenees
Autor/s
Ejarque Montolio, Ana; et al.,
Any
2010
Mes
7
Tesi universitat lectura
-
Universitat de lectura
Tesi director
-
Tesi codirector
-
Títol de la revista
Journal of Archeological Science
Pàgines
1468-1479
Volum de la revista
37
Numero revista
-
Idioma
Anglès
ISBN / ISSN
03054403
Titol obra
-
Editorial obra
-
Llocpub Obra
-
DOI
10.1016/j.jas.2010.01.007

Accés text complet en obert
Paraules clau
Cultural landscapes, Eastern Pyrenees, Fine spatial-resolution pollen analyses, High mountain land-use, Holocene, Micro-regional variability, Multi-proxy study

Resum
(ENG) Previous research acknowledges the ancient and complex land-use history of European mountainous areas, which are characterised by a remarkable regional variability in terms of human practices and patterns of occupation during the Holocene. However, the combined palaeoenvironmental and archaeological study of highland human management at a micro-regional scale remains a largely unexplored research field, especially in the Pyrenees. A combined pollen, stomata, non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs) and macrocharcoal study was carried out at three nearby alpine and subalpine peat basins from a relatively small territory (ca.1700 ha) at the Madriu valley (Andorra, eastern Pyrenees), following a fine spatial-resolution strategy. The purpose was to test the suitability of high altitudinal palaeoecological sequences when reconstructing past small-scale land-use variability. The palaeoecological results of those peat records are compared and further integrated with archaeological local data, and together underline the marked complexity of high mountain land-use system over the Holocene period. Main phases of micro-regional land-use and landscape variability can be distinguished from the middle Neolithic to the early Bronze Age and from the Roman Period to the Modern Era. Conversely, several phases of homogeneous landscape management are distinguishable during the early Neolithic, and from the late Bronze to the late Iron Age. Results drawn from this study show that landscape variability is not necessarily connected to topographic or climatic parameters, and underline the role of social, economical and cultural parameters in the land-use organisation and the landscape shaping of high mountain spaces since Prehistory.