Véronique Laroulandie
University of Bordeaux
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Featured researches published by Véronique Laroulandie.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Eugène Morin; Véronique Laroulandie
In Africa and western Eurasia, occurrences of burials and utilized ocher fragments during the late Middle and early Late Pleistocene are often considered evidence for the emergence of symbolically-mediated behavior. Perhaps less controversial for the study of human cognitive evolution are finds of marine shell beads and complex designs on organic and mineral artifacts in early modern human (EMH) assemblages conservatively dated to ≈100–60 kilo-years (ka) ago. Here we show that, in France, Neanderthals used skeletal parts of large diurnal raptors presumably for symbolic purposes at Combe-Grenal in a layer dated to marine isotope stage (MIS) 5b (≈90 ka) and at Les Fieux in stratigraphic units dated to the early/middle phase of MIS 3 (60–40 ka). The presence of similar objects in other Middle Paleolithic contexts in France and Italy suggest that raptors were used as means of symbolic expression by Neanderthals in these regions.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Matteo Romandini; Marco Peresani; Véronique Laroulandie; Laure Metz; Andreas Pastoors; Manuel Vaquero; Ludovic Slimak
To contribute to have a better understanding of the symbolic or not use of certain items by Neanderthals, this work presents new evidence of the deliberate removal of raptor claws occurred in Mediterranean Europe during the recent phases of the Mousterian. Rio Secco Cave in the north-east of Italy and Mandrin Cave in the Middle Rhône valley have recently produced two golden eagle pedal phalanges from contexts not younger than 49.1–48.0 ky cal BP at Rio Secco and dated around 50.0 ky cal BP at Mandrin. The bones show cut-marks located on the proximal end ascribable to the cutting of the tendons and the incision of the cortical organic tissues. Also supported by an experimental removal of large raptor claws, our reconstruction explains that the deliberate detachment occurred without damaging the claw, in a way comparable at a general level with other Mousterian contexts across Europe. After excluding that these specimens met the nutritional requirements for human subsistence, we discuss the possible implications these findings perform in our current knowledge of the European Middle Palaeolithic context.
Historical Biology | 2018
Christiane Denys; Emmanuelle Stoetzel; P. Andrews; Salvador Bailon; A. Rihane; J. B. Huchet; Yolanda Fernández-Jalvo; Véronique Laroulandie
Abstract Most small terrestrial vertebrate accumulations in archaeological and palaeontological sites result from predation but we are far from having an exhaustive knowledge of modern predators’ diet, ecological niches and bone modification patterns especially in North African sites. The few neotaphonomic referentials available result from taxon-specialized palaeontologists’ initiatives. A survey of the literature on North Africa predators shows that their prey diversity is high and not only include rodent and shrews but also amphibians, squamates, bats and insects. We performed here a pilot taphonomic study of a Moroccan Tyto alba nest pellets including the whole taxa consumed (birds, rodents, shrews, amphibians, insects). We analyzed bone representation, fragmentation and digestion for each taxa and then compared the results. We observe differences between the taxa but on the whole find higher modification levels for this assemblage compared to roost sites of barn owls from other sites. We used for the comparisons homologous bones like the femur and the humerus and also found differences between the taxa. For example, digestion was lower on amphibians and birds than on micromammals. We discuss here some methodological issues as well as archaeological and palaeoenviromental ones by comparison with the Pleisto-Holocene site of El Harhoura II (Morocco).
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Cédric Beauval; Bruno Maureille; François Lacrampe-Cuyaubère; David Serre; David Peressinotto; Jean-Guillaume Bordes; David Cochard; Isabelle Couchoud; David Dubrasquet; Véronique Laroulandie; Arnaud Lenoble; Jean‑Baptiste Mallye; Sylvain Pasty; Jérôme Primault; Nadin Rohland; Svante Pääbo; Erik Trinkaus
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2011
Jean-Marc Pétillon; Olivier Bignon; Pierre Bodu; Pierre Cattelain; Grégory Debout; Mathieu Langlais; Véronique Laroulandie; Hugues Plisson; Boris Valentin
Archive | 2000
Véronique Laroulandie
Biosphere to Lithosphere, New studies in vertebrate taphonomy. Edited by T. O'Connor. Processings of the 9th Conference of the International Council of Archaeozoology, Durham 23-28 august 2002 | 2005
Véronique Laroulandie
Archive | 2007
Marie Soressi; William Rendu; Pierre-Jean Texier; Émilie Claud Loïc Daulny; Francesco D'Errico; Véronique Laroulandie; Bruno Maureille; M. Niclot; Steve Schwortz; Anne-Marie Tillier
Quaternary International | 2012
Mathieu Langlais; Sandrine Costamagno; Véronique Laroulandie; Jean-Marc Pétillon; Emmanuel Discamps; Jean-Baptiste Mallye; David Cochard; Delphine Kuntz
Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia | 2002
Véronique Laroulandie