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Dive into the research topics where Ivana Fiore is active.

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Featured researches published by Ivana Fiore.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Late Neandertals and the intentional removal of feathers as evidenced from bird bone taphonomy at Fumane Cave 44 ky B.P., Italy

Marco Peresani; Ivana Fiore; Monica Gala; Matteo Romandini; Antonio Tagliacozzo

A large and varied avifaunal bone assemblage from the final Mousterian levels of Grotta di Fumane, northern Italy, reveals unusual human modifications on species that are not clearly relatable to feeding or utilitarian uses (i.e., lammergeier, Eurasian black vulture, golden eagle, red-footed falcon, common wood pigeon, and Alpine chough). Cut, peeling, and scrape marks, as well as diagnostic fractures and a breakthrough, are observed exclusively on wings, indicating the intentional removal of large feathers by Neandertals. The species involved, the anatomical elements affected, and the unusual type and location of the human modifications indicate an activity linked to the symbolic sphere and the behavioral modernity of this European autochthonous population.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Climate-driven environmental changes around 8,200 years ago favoured increases in cetacean strandings and Mediterranean hunter-gatherers exploited them.

Marcello A. Mannino; Sahra Talamo; Antonio Tagliacozzo; Ivana Fiore; Olaf Nehlich; Marcello Piperno; Sebastiano Tusa; Carmine Collina; Rosaria Di Salvo; Vittoria Schimmenti; Michael P. Richards

Cetacean mass strandings occur regularly worldwide, yet the compounded effects of natural and anthropogenic factors often complicate our understanding of these phenomena. Evidence of past stranding episodes may, thus, be essential to establish the potential influence of climate change. Investigations on bones from the site of Grotta dell’Uzzo in North West Sicily (Italy) show that the rapid climate change around 8,200 years ago coincided with increased strandings in the Mediterranean Sea. Stable isotope analyses on collagen from a large sample of remains recovered at this cave indicate that Mesolithic hunter-gatherers relied little on marine resources. A human and a red fox dating to the 8.2-kyr-BP climatic event, however, acquired at least one third of their protein from cetaceans. Numerous carcasses should have been available annually, for at least a decade, to obtain these proportions of meat. Our findings imply that climate-driven environmental changes, caused by global warming, may represent a serious threat to cetaceans in the near future.


11th ICAZ International Conference of ICAZ ( International Council for Archaeozoology) | 2013

Animal Exploitation Strategies during the Uluzzian at Grotta di Fumane (Verona, Italy)

Antonio Tagliacozzo; Matteo Romandini; Ivana Fiore; Monica Gala; Marco Peresani

At Grotta di Fumane, signatures such as butchering traces, burned bones, fragmentation and scanty carnivore traces prove that the faunal remains from the Uluzzian layers (A4 and A3) are the product of human activity. Human modifications are also present on the bones of birds like black grouse, Alpine chough, and large raptors like the golden eagle. Faunal evidence indicates that human hunting focused on red deer and ibex, but also on giant deer, roe deer, bison and chamois. Wolf, fox and brown bear were exploited as well. All age classes of red deer and adult ibex were preyed upon. The presence of young ungulates suggests that the cave was used throughout the year. The faunal assemblage of the final Uluzzian layers chronicles climatic cooling with respect to the previous Mousterian period, and modifications in hunting comparable to those characteristic of the Aurignacian occupation.


Quartär : Internationales Jahrbuch zur Eiszeitalter- und Steinzeitforschung | 2013

Land-Use Strategies, Related Tool-Kits and Social Organization of Lower and Middle Palaeolithic Groups in the South-East of the Massif Central, France Strategien der Landschaftsnutzung, Geräteinventare und soziale Organisation von alt- und mittelpaläolithischen Gruppen im südwestfranzösischen Zentralmassif

Jean-Paul Raynal; Marie-Hélène Moncel; Paul Fernandes; Peter Bindon; C. Daujeaurd; Ivana Fiore; Carmen Santagata; M. Lecorre-Le Beux; Jean-Luc Guadelli; J.-M. Le Pape; Antonio Tagliacozzo; René Liabeuf; L. Servant; H. Seret

In the southern French Massif Central and on its southeastern border but at different altitudes, open-air sites, rock-shelters and caves have yielded artefacts ranging from isolated finds to abundant series that date from MIS 9 to at least MIS 3, representing Lower Palaeolithic (sensu Acheulean bifacial production) and diverse Middle Palaeolithic facies. From the upstream part of the gorges of the Allier and Loire Rivers to the Chassezac and Ardeche Rivers surveys, excavations and detailed analyses of the material from these sites offer data on subsistence behaviours including among others raw material acquisition, lithic reduction sequences, hunted species and carcass treatment. This information has been gathered during a Collective Research Program (PCR Espaces et subsistance au Paleolithique moyen dans le sud du Massif central) and enables discussion of the mobility of human groups, the size of the territory they occupied, duration of site occupation, landscape cognition and resource exploitation and allows some speculation about the way these humans perceived the landscape in which they lived and how these ethnographic perceptions may have changed over time. In this paper, we focus on results obtained from stratified sites dated from MIS 9 until MIS 4. Orgnac 3, Payre and Barasses II sites, Abri du Maras and Abri des Pecheurs are caves and shelters located on low plateaus on the right bank of the Rhone corridor while the cave of Sainte-Anne I and Baume-Vallee rock-shelter are located in the mid-mountains of the Velay. The lithic repertoires found in Payre, Saint-Anne I, Baume-Vallee, Abri du Maras, Abri des Pecheurs and Barasses II suggest that the stone knapping and retouching activities that took place in them were directed towards achieving different objectives at each of them. In the several human occupation phases at Payre, the main core technology closely parallels the discoid type that provides unstandardized flakes. A lack of hafted points and the importation into the site of large flakes made from various local stone types along with introduced flint flakes and nodules are related to the seasonal occupation of the site due to its location. The flint reduction sequences are quite complete but those on local stones are often partial, indicating mobility of the occupants and off-site manufacture of lithic tools. Lithic raw material imported into Sainte-Anne I originates from more than thirty different primary localities close to the site as well as from secondary and sub-primary colluvial and alluvial outcrops. The Neanderthals who used this cave obviously had an excellent knowledge of the occurrence and potential of local resources. The presence of some specific flint types suggests the use of exploitation or trade routes which crossed the borders of fluvial systems. If the duration of occupation events can be judged from the presence of a large number of artefacts produced on local volcanic rocks, quartz and types of flint, the absence of certain items like large-sized and retouched flakes from the reduction sequences, indicates that these products were used away from the site or removed when the occupants moved on through their territories. In the upper layers of Abri du Maras, the presence of flakes and pointed artefacts as well as the kind of retouch on them suggests that special equipment was being manufactured, possibly involved with hunting and butchering reindeer and horses during long-term residential occupation. Most of the Levallois lithic processing systems are complete but, judging from the size of the core-flakes, large un-retouched blades were being imported into the site suggesting that other tasks may have been undertaken there using these transported artefacts. At Abri des Pecheurs, irregular and thick broken flakes of quartz and small flakes of flint suggest an expedient lithic technology. This assemblage was probably the result of brief human occupation events in the shelter during which they processed some parts of a few cervids and ibex. The chaine operatoire is complete for quartz but incomplete for the flint assemblage which contains a higher ratio of tools to unmodified lithics. At Baume-Vallee, a range of flakes was produced by a variety of knapping techniques. Using different techniques to obtain different types of tool blanks from the same core was presumably a strategy of exploitation designed to conserve a precious resource that was available mainly as small pebbles. This assemblage indicates that multiple tasks were conducted simultaneously at a seasonal horse and cervid hunting camp. Microwear analysis shows that the stone artefacts were used to work soft or semi-hard materials, probably wood. The “Charentian” aspect of the assemblage is a reflection of intense edge reduction and appears identical to that identified at the Abri du Maras. Overall, faunal remains indicate that a diverse range of landscapes was exploited during its procurement. Also, the territorial perspective provided by the widely disparate sources of lithic raw materials indicates that the groups inhabiting the sites were mobile and undertook multidirectional and more or less long-distance forays into the surrounding landscapes. Despite the complexity of territorial exploitation strategies suggested by the importation of varied and remote resources into these three sites, at present these subsistence activities provide no evidence for the existence of planning strategies comparable to those observed elsewhere. Nor can we confirm a strictly bipolarized (summer-winter / highlands-lowlands) circulatory subsistence pattern. However, there are suggestions of exploitation routes that proceeded back and forth along the course of the Allier and more certainly along the Loire for Charentian groups. The locations of the more remote geo-resources indicate the existence of a widespread exploitation pattern radiating outwards from semi-residential camps. The dispersed locations visited or exploited by the groups of hunter-gatherers transiently occupying other camps that were brief stopping places also supports this patterning. Additionally, remote or semi-remote lithic outcrops may mark some territorial limit or perhaps they may be places where adjoining groups could meet for some unknown purpose or, such locations may even be the source of particular raw materials needed for special occasions if not for unique tasks. In the same vein, lithic artefacts abandoned in the landscape that are often categorized by archaeologists as isolates may just as easily have been left intentionally as markers for others to discover. Although a resource territory may well differ from a social territory, petro-archaeology may be able to contribute new methods through which to decipher more of the Neanderthals’ cognitive sphere. Among the exploitative itineraries we have identified are: collection of lithic resources; transportation of these lithic resources; their abandonment; seasonal hunting of selected target species; collection of other permanently available or seasonally abundant resources; processing these and other resources at a variety of stopping places and camps; the possibility of single gender as well as mixed-gender groups undertaking specific tasks; confirmation that, from MIS 9 until MIS 3, Neanderthals were not simply reacting to landscape characteristics, they were interacting with landscape features (geosymbols) and responding to environmental and bio-resource changes in a deterministic manner. These kinds of responses to landscapes and resource occurrence are very close to modern hunter-gatherer behaviour.


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2004

Ecology and subsistence strategies in the eastern Italian Alps during the Middle Palaeolithic

Ivana Fiore; Monica Gala; Antonio Tagliacozzo


L'Italia tra 15.000 e 10.000 anni fa cosmopolitismo e regionalità nel tardoglaciale | 2005

L'Epigravettiano recente nell'area prealpina e alpina orientale

Stefano Bertola; Alberto Broglio; P. F. Cassoli; Cristina Cilli; Anna Cusinato; Giampaolo Dalmeri; Mirco De Stefani; Ivana Fiore; Federica Fontana; Giacomo Giacobini; Antonio Guerreschi; Fabio Gurioli; Cristina Lemorini; Jérémie Liagre; Giancarla Malerba; Cyril Montoya; Marco Peresani; Antonio Rocci Ris; Patrizia Rossetti; Antonio Tagliacozzo; Sara Ziggiotti


Quaternary International | 2014

Middle Paleolithic bone retouchers in Southeastern France: Variability and functionality

Camille Daujeard; Marie-Hélène Moncel; Ivana Fiore; Antonio Tagliacozzo; Peter Bindon; Jean-Paul Raynal


Quaternary International | 2016

Palaeoloxodon exploitation at the Middle Pleistocene site of La Polledrara di Cecanibbio (Rome, Italy)

Ernesto Santucci; Federica Marano; Eugenio Cerilli; Ivana Fiore; Cristina Lemorini; Maria Rita Palombo; Anna Paola Anzidei; Grazia Maria Bulgarelli


Les premiers peuplements en Europe<br />Colloque international: Données récentes sur les modalités de peuplement et sur le cadre chronostratigraphique, géologique et paléogéographique des industries du Paléolithique ancien et moyen en Europe (Rennes, 22-25 septembre 2003), edited by: Nathalie Molines, Marie-Hélène Moncel & Jean-Laurent Monnier | 2004

Paléolithique moyen dans le Sud du Massif central : les données du Velay (Haute-Loire, France)

Jean-Paul Raynal; Muriel Le Corre-Le Beux; Carmen Santagata; Paul Fernandes; Jean-Luc Guadelli; Ivana Fiore; Antonio Tagliacozzo; Cristina Lemorini; Edward J. Rhodes; Pascal Bertran; Guy Kieffer; Dominique Vivent


Quaternary International | 2016

From feathers to food: Reconstructing the complete exploitation of avifaunal resources by Neanderthals at Fumane cave, unit A9

Ivana Fiore; Monica Gala; Matteo Romandini; Enzo Cocca; Antonio Tagliacozzo; Marco Peresani

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Marie-Hélène Moncel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Cristina Lemorini

Sapienza University of Rome

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