Luis Teira
University of Cantabria
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Publication
Featured researches published by Luis Teira.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Andrea L. Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Amaia Arranz; Lydia Zapata; Carla Lancelotti; Marco Madella; Luis Teira; Miguel Jiménez; Frank Braemer; Juan José Ibáñez
We present the results of the microstratigraphic, phytolith and wood charcoal study of the remains of a 10.5 ka roof. The roof is part of a building excavated at Tell Qarassa (South Syria), assigned to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B period (PPNB). The Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) period in the Levant coincides with the emergence of farming. This fundamental change in subsistence strategy implied the shift from mobile to settled aggregated life, and from tents and huts to hard buildings. As settled life spread across the Levant, a generalised transition from round to square buildings occurred, that is a trademark of the PPNB period. The study of these buildings is fundamental for the understanding of the ever-stronger reciprocal socio-ecological relationship humans developed with the local environment since the introduction of sedentism and domestication. Descriptions of buildings in PPN archaeological contexts are usually restricted to the macroscopic observation of wooden elements (posts and beams) and mineral components (daub, plaster and stone elements). Reconstructions of microscopic and organic components are frequently based on ethnographic analogy. The direct study of macroscopic and microscopic, organic and mineral, building components performed at Tell Qarassa provides new insights on building conception, maintenance, use and destruction. These elements reflect new emerging paradigms in the relationship between Neolithic societies and the environment. A square building was possibly covered here with a radial roof, providing a glance into a topologic shift in the conception and understanding of volumes, from round-based to square-based geometries. Macroscopic and microscopic roof components indicate buildings were conceived for year-round residence rather than seasonal mobility. This implied performing maintenance and restoration of partially damaged buildings, as well as their adaptation to seasonal variability.
Antiquity | 2015
Pablo Arias; Miriam Cubas; Miguel Ángel Fano; Jesús Francisco Jordá Pardo; Christoph Salzmann; Felix Teichner; Luis Teira
Abstract Mesolithic hunter-gatherer settlements generally leave ephemeral archaeological traces and are notoriously difficult to detect. Nowhere is this more so than on the northern coast of Spain, despite a long tradition of Mesolithic research. In this project, evidence of Mesolithic activity together with the geomorphological and topographical suitability of particular locations were used to select areas for large-scale geophysical survey. The results demonstrate the potential of the new methodology: magnetometry survey at El Alloru revealed the very first Asturian open-air settlement site to be discovered.
System | 2016
David Ortega; Juan José Ibáñez; Daniel Campos; Lamya Khalidi; Vicenç Méndez; Luis Teira
In the Near East, nomadic hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary farmers for the first time during the transition into the Neolithic. Sedentary life presented a risk of isolation for Neolithic groups. As fluid intergroup interactions are crucial for the sharing of information, resources and genes, Neolithic villages developed a network of contacts. In this paper we study obsidian exchange between Neolithic villages in order to characterize this network of interaction. Using agent-based modelling and elements taken from complex network theory, we model obsidian exchange and compare results with archaeological data. We demonstrate that complex networks of interaction were established at the outset of the Neolithic and hypothesize that the existence of these complex networks was a necessary condition for the success and spread of a new way of living.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013
Edgard Camarós; Marian Cueto; Luis Teira; Jesús Tapia; Miriam Cubas; Ruth Blasco; Jordi Rosell
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2014
David Ortega; Juan José Ibáñez; Lamya Khalidi; Vicenç Méndez; Daniel Campos; Luis Teira
Quaternary International | 2017
Edgard Camarós; Marián Cueto; Luis Teira; Susanne C. Münzel; Frédéric Plassard; Pablo Arias
Archive | 2012
Xavier Terradas-Batlle; Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Frank Braemer; Lionel Gourichon; Luis Teira
Archive | 2013
Xavier Terradas-Batlle; Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Frank Braemer; Karen Hardy; Eneko Iriarte; Marco Madella; David Ortega i Cobos; Anita Radini; Luis Teira
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2015
Jonathan Santana; J. Velasco; Andrea L. Balbo; Eneko Iriarte; Lydia Zapata; Luis Teira; C. Nicolle; Frank Braemer; Juan José Ibáñez
Quaternary International | 2017
Pablo Arias; Mariana Diniz; Miriam Cubas; Eneko Iriarte; Christoph Salzmann; Felix Teichner; Luis Teira
Collaboration
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Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
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