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Dive into the research topics where Daria Petruso is active.

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Featured researches published by Daria Petruso.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Origin and diet of the prehistoric hunter-gatherers on the Mediterranean island of Favignana (Ègadi Islands, Sicily)

Marcello A. Mannino; Giulio Catalano; Sahra Talamo; Giovanni Mannino; Rosaria Di Salvo; Vittoria Schimmenti; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Andrea Messina; Daria Petruso; David Caramelli; Michael P. Richards; Luca Sineo

Hunter-gatherers living in Europe during the transition from the late Pleistocene to the Holocene intensified food acquisition by broadening the range of resources exploited to include marine taxa. However, little is known on the nature of this dietary change in the Mediterranean Basin. A key area to investigate this issue is the archipelago of the Ègadi Islands, most of which were connected to Sicily until the early Holocene. The site of Grotta d’Oriente, on the present-day island of Favignana, was occupied by hunter-gatherers when Postglacial environmental changes were taking place (14,000-7,500 cal BP). Here we present the results of AMS radiocarbon dating, palaeogenetic and isotopic analyses undertaken on skeletal remains of the humans buried at Grotta d’Oriente. Analyses of the mitochondrial hypervariable first region of individual Oriente B, which belongs to the HV-1 haplogroup, suggest for the first time on genetic grounds that humans living in Sicily during the early Holocene could have originated from groups that migrated from the Italian Peninsula around the Last Glacial Maximum. Carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses show that the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of Favignana consumed almost exclusively protein from terrestrial game and that there was only a slight increase in marine food consumption from the late Pleistocene to the early Holocene. This dietary change was similar in scale to that at sites on mainland Sicily and in the rest of the Mediterranean, suggesting that the hunter-gatherers of Grotta d’Oriente did not modify their subsistence strategies specifically to adapt to the progressive isolation of Favignana. The limited development of technologies for intensively exploiting marine resources was probably a consequence both of Mediterranean oligotrophy and of the small effective population size of these increasingly isolated human groups, which made innovation less likely and prevented transmission of fitness-enhancing adaptations.


Rivista Italiana Di Paleontologia E Stratigrafia | 2010

THE GARGANO TERRE ROSSE INSULAR FAUNAS: AN OVERVIEW

Federico Masini; Giovanni Surdi; Daria Petruso; Paolo Maria Rinaldi

After forty years from its discovery, the history of the field surveys and of the researches on the fossiliferous deposits on Gargano is briefly reported. The Gargano fauna belongs to the Abruzzo-Apulian Palaeobioprovince (including also Scontrone and Palena, Abruzzo). The fossil assemblage comprehends all the classes of terrestrial vertebrates: Reptilia, Amphibia, Aves and Mammalia. The faunal composition is unbalanced and presents the features of a typical insular endemic fauna. The bulk of the assemblage is composed of small mammals and birds. Based on literature, we report the most characteristic features, phylogenetic relationships, and evolutionary remarks on a list of mammals, focusing particularly on the adaptations of the most endemic taxa. Moreover, a biochronological scheme of the major faunal events is proposed and illustrated. Although still imperfect, the scheme is the first synopsis of all the biochronological and taxonomical information on mammals so far available. Eventually, the hypotheses on the origin and modes of colonisation are summarized and shortly discussed. From this overview the Gargano fauna is indeed of great interest for studies of evolution and biogeography. Nonetheless, there are persistent uncertainties on its age and origin, as well as on the age of infilling of the karstic fissure system of this unique fossiliferous locality.


Geobios | 2002

Pleistocene Calabrian and Sicilian bioprovinces

Laura Bonfiglio; Gabriella Mangano; Antonella Cinzia Marra; Federico Masini; Marco Pavia; Daria Petruso


Quaternary International | 2008

Origination and extinction patterns of mammals in three central Western Mediterranean islands from the Late Miocene to Quaternary

Federico Masini; Daria Petruso; Laura Bonfiglio; Gabriella Mangano


IL QUATERNARIO | 1999

Oscillazioni eustatiche, biocronologia e depositi continentali quaternari e neotettonica nella Sicilia nord-ocidentale (Penisola di S. Vito lo Capo – Trapani)

C Di Maggio; Antonella Incandela; Federico Masini; Daria Petruso; P Renda; C Simonelli; Giovanni Boschian


Archive | 2004

Quaternary eustatic fluctuations and biochronology of vertebrate-bearing deposits correlated with marine terraces in Sicily

Gioacchina Mangano; Valerio Agnesi; Federico Masini; Cipriano Di Maggio; Christian Conoscenti; Daria Petruso; Carolina Di Patti; Agnesi; Laura Bonfiglio; Ciurcina C; Conoscenti C; Di Maggio C; Di Patti C; Gabriella Mangano; Masini F; Giulio Pavia; Petruso D; Spigo U


IL QUATERNARIO | 2003

Bio-chronology of pleistocene vertebrate faunas of sicily and correlation of vertebrate bearing deposits with marine deposits

Laura Bonfiglio; C. Di Maggio; A. Marra; Federico Masini; Daria Petruso


Quaternary International | 2011

The Grotta Grande of Scario (Salerno, Italy): Archaeology and environment during the last interglacial (MIS 5) of the Mediterranean region

Annamaria Ronchitelli; Paolo Boscato; Giovanni Surdi; Federico Masini; Daria Petruso; Carla Alberta Accorsi; Paola Torri


Biogeographia – The Journal of Integrative Biogeography | 2002

The role of coastal areas in the Neogene-Quaternary mammal island populations of the central Mediterranean

Federico Masini; Laura Bonfiglio; Daria Petruso; Cinzia Marra Antonella; Laura Abbazzi; Massimo Delfino; Flaviano Fanfani; Danilo Torre


Quaternary International | 2011

Phylogeny and biogeography of fossil and extant Microtus (Terricola) (Mammalia, Rodentia) of Sicily and the southern Italian peninsula based on current dentalmorphological data

Daria Petruso; Elisa Locatelli; Giovanni Surdi; Chiara Dalla Valle; Federico Masini; Benedetto Sala

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