Diego E. Angelucci
University of Trento
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Featured researches published by Diego E. Angelucci.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
João Zilhão; Diego E. Angelucci; Ernestina Badal-Garcia; Francesco d'Errico; Floréal Daniel; Laure Dayet; Katerina Douka; Thomas Higham; María José Martínez-Sánchez; Ricardo Montes-Bernardez; Sonia Murcia-Mascarós; Carmen Pérez-Sirvent; Clodoaldo Roldan-Garcia; Marian Vanhaeren; Valentín Villaverde; Rachel Wood; Josefina Zapata
Two sites of the Neandertal-associated Middle Paleolithic of Iberia, dated to as early as approximately 50,000 years ago, yielded perforated and pigment-stained marine shells. At Cueva de los Aviones, three umbo-perforated valves of Acanthocardia and Glycymeris were found alongside lumps of yellow and red colorants, and residues preserved inside a Spondylus shell consist of a red lepidocrocite base mixed with ground, dark red-to-black fragments of hematite and pyrite. A perforated Pecten shell, painted on its external, white side with an orange mix of goethite and hematite, was abandoned after breakage at Cueva Antón, 60 km inland. Comparable early modern human-associated material from Africa and the Near East is widely accepted as evidence for body ornamentation, implying behavioral modernity. The Iberian finds show that European Neandertals were no different from coeval Africans in this regard, countering genetic/cognitive explanations for the emergence of symbolism and strengthening demographic/social ones.
World Archaeology | 2009
Diego E. Angelucci; Giovanni Boschian; Marta Fontanals; Annaluisa Pedrotti; Josep Maria Vergès
Abstract Several Neolithic to Iron Age sites of the Mediterranean region contain archaeological sediments, called fumiers, which are composed mainly of burnt animal dung and vegetal remains, and are commonly interpreted as the product of pastoral activities. Here we address three main topics about these sediments, which occur almost exclusively in the entrance areas of karstic caves and rock-shelters: their characteristics; methodological aspects of their excavation and study; and their archaeological interpretation. For such purposes, we briefly review the information available about Neolithic fumiers and present the first data from the sites of El Mirador (Burgos, Spain) and Riparo Gaban (Trento, Italy).
Science Advances | 2018
Dirk L. Hoffmann; Diego E. Angelucci; Valentín Villaverde; Josefina Zapata; João Zilhão
U-Th dating of archaeological deposits of Cueva de los Aviones provides evidence for Neandertal symbolism 115,000 years ago. Cueva de los Aviones (southeast Spain) is a site of the Neandertal-associated Middle Paleolithic of Europe. It has yielded ochred and perforated marine shells, red and yellow colorants, and shell containers that feature residues of complex pigmentatious mixtures. Similar finds from the Middle Stone Age of South Africa have been widely accepted as archaeological proxies for symbolic behavior. U-series dating of the flowstone capping the Cueva de los Aviones deposit shows that the symbolic finds made therein are 115,000 to 120,000 years old and predate the earliest known comparable evidence associated with modern humans by 20,000 to 40,000 years. Given our findings, it is possible that the roots of symbolic material culture may be found among the common ancestor of Neandertals and modern humans, more than half-a-million years ago.
Antiquity | 2016
M.J. Walker; D. Anesin; Diego E. Angelucci; A. Avilés-Fernández; Francesco Berna; A.T. Buitrago-López; Yolanda Fernández-Jalvo; M. Haber-Uriarte; A. López-Jiménez; M.V. López-Martínez; I. Martín-Lerma; J. Ortega-Rodrigáñez; J.L. Polo-Camacho; S.E. Rhodes; Daniel Richter; T. Rodríguez-Estrella; Jean-Luc Schwenninger; Anne R. Skinner
Abstract Control of fire was a hallmark of developing human cognition and an essential technology for the colonisation of cooler latitudes. In Europe, the earliest evidence comes from recent work at the site of Cueva Negra del Estrecho del Río Quípar in south-eastern Spain. Charred and calcined bone and thermally altered chert were recovered from a deep, 0.8-million-year-old sedimentary deposit. A combination of analyses indicated that these had been heated to 400–600°C, compatible with burning. Inspection of the sediment and hydroxyapatite also suggests combustion and degradation of the bone. The results provide new insight into Early Palaeolithic use of fire and its significance for human evolution.
Heliyon | 2017
João Zilhão; Daniela Anesin; Thierry Aubry; Ernestina Badal; Dan Cabanes; Martin Kehl; Nicole Klasen; Armando Lucena; Ignacio Martín-Lerma; Susana Martínez; Henrique Matias; Davide Susini; Peter Steier; Eva Maria Wild; Diego E. Angelucci; Valentín Villaverde; Josefina Zapata
The late persistence in Southern Iberia of a Neandertal-associated Middle Paleolithic is supported by the archeological stratigraphy and the radiocarbon and luminescence dating of three newly excavated localities in the Mula basin of Murcia (Spain). At Cueva Antón, Mousterian layer I-k can be no more than 37,100 years-old. At La Boja, the basal Aurignacian can be no less than 36,500 years-old. The regional Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition process is thereby bounded to the first half of the 37th millennium Before Present, in agreement with evidence from Andalusia, Gibraltar and Portugal. This chronology represents a lag of minimally 3000 years with the rest of Europe, where that transition and the associated process of Neandertal/modern human admixture took place between 40,000 and 42,000 years ago. The lag implies the presence of an effective barrier to migration and diffusion across the Ebro river depression, which, based on available paleoenvironmental indicators, would at that time have represented a major biogeographical divide. In addition, (a) the Phlegraean Fields caldera explosion, which occurred 39,850 years ago, would have stalled the Neandertal/modern human admixture front because of the population sink it generated in Central and Eastern Europe, and (b) the long period of ameliorated climate that came soon after (Greenland Interstadial 8, during which forests underwent a marked expansion in Iberian regions south of 40°N) would have enhanced the “Ebro Frontier” effect. These findings have two broader paleoanthropological implications: firstly, that, below the Ebro, the archeological record made prior to 37,000 years ago must be attributed, in all its aspects and components, to the Neandertals (or their ancestors); secondly, that modern human emergence is best seen as an uneven, punctuated process during which long-lasting barriers to gene flow and cultural diffusion could have existed across rather short distances, with attendant consequences for ancient genetics and models of human population history.
Geochronometria | 2015
Christoph Burow; Martin Kehl; Alexandra Hilgers; Gerd-Christian Weniger; Diego E. Angelucci; Valentín Villaverde; Josefina Zapata; João Zilhão
Abstract The fluvial sediments at Cueva Antón, a Middle Palaeolithic rock shelter located in the valley of the River Mula (Southeast Spain), produced abundant lithic assemblages of Mousterian affinities. Radiocarbon dates are available for the upper part of the archaeological succession, while for the middle to lower parts chronometric data have been missing. Here we present luminescence dating results for these parts of the succession. Quartz OSL on small aliquots and single grain measurements yield ages ranging from 69 ± 7 ka to 82 ± 8 ka with a weighted mean of 72 ± 4 ka for sub-complexes AS2 to AS5. Equivalent dose estimates from large aliquots were highest and inconsistent with those from single grains and small multiple grain aliquots. This is probably caused by the presence of over-saturating grains, which have been quantified by single grain measurements. Additional post-IR IRSL measurements on coarse grained feldspar give strong support to a well-bleached quartz OSL signal. While independent chronometric control is missing, the results are within the expected age range and support the notion of a rapid accumulation of the fluvial deposits.
Landscape Research | 2018
Francesco Carrer; Diego E. Angelucci
Abstract This paper addresses the question of the formation and evolution of upland rural Alpine landscapes. The case study presented here refers to two upland valleys—Val Molinac and Val Poré—located in the Alpine region of Trentino (Italy). Archaeological fieldwork in the area has revealed a complex landscape; the main features of which are dry stone structures (enclosures, huts and rock shelters), mainly related to pastoralism. Archaeological data and documentary sources show that the investigated landscape underwent distinct formative phases or ‘tipping points’—in the fifteenth to sixteenth centuries AD and in the late eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries AD—and suggest that its evolution has neither been gradual nor incremental, as generally assumed. ‘Punctuated equilibrium paradigm’, derived from evolutionary theory, is applied to address the discontinuous evolution of the upland landscapes of Val Molinac and Val Poré, and theoretical implications for the study of rural landscapes are discussed.
Trabajos De Prehistoria | 2002
Josep Maria Vergès; Ethel Allué; Diego E. Angelucci; Arthur Cebrià; Carlos Díez; Marta Fontanals; Antoni Manyanós; Sonsoles Montero; Sergio Moral; Manuel Vaquero; Josep Zaragoza
Quaternary Research | 2011
Thierry Aubry; Luca Antonio Dimuccio; Miguel Almeida; Maria Joao Neves; Diego E. Angelucci; Lúcio Cunha
Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2009
Diego E. Angelucci; João Zilhão