PAVC - RB - ARRCI- Artigos e Resumos em Revistas Científicas Internacionais
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- VuRA: A proposal for calculating vulnerability and risk in rock art sites. The experience in Foz CôaPublication . Carrera-Ramírez, Fernando; Caetano, Vera Moreira
- Far- reaching hunter- gatherer networks during the Last Glacial Maximum in Western EuropePublication . Torre, Marta Sánchez de la; Mangado, Xavier; Castillo-Jiménez, Samuel; Cuartero, Felipe; Hewitt, Richard J.; Luque, Luis; Gratuze, Bernard; Almeida, Miguel; Andrés-Herrero, Maria de; Constans, Guilhem; Marguet, Louis; Aubry, Thierry; Alcolea-González, José J.; Alcaraz-Castaño, ManuelSocial networking is an essential feature of hunter- gatherer societies. It fosters the circulation of goods and information and enables kinship ties across different scales, including long- distance contacts. While such behaviors are known since at least the Upper Palaeolithic, evidence for geographically extensive social networks remains scarce. This evidence is limited to indirect inferences based on shared cultural traits, “art” styles, and symbolic items, while lithic raw material movements are mostly local and regional, with few cases exceeding 300 kilometers. We provide geochemical evidence for the largest confirmed distance between the source and discard location of a knapped lithic object in Palaeolithic Europe. Solutrean artifacts discarded at Peña Capón, Central Iberia, were sourced in Southwest France, 600 to 700 kilometers away. This demonstrates social networks of unprecedented geographic scale maintained during ∼1400 years during the Last Glacial Maximum. It also suggests that stone tools were exchanged as symbolic items to solidify social contacts and sustain far- reaching networks as risk- buffering mechanisms among widely dispersed hunter- gatherers.
- The Côa Valley Prehistoric Rock Art 20 Years after World Heritage Nomination - Past Heritage, Present Issues, Future PerspectivesPublication . Fernandes, António Batarda; Navarro, Bruno J.; Fernandes
- Use of photogrammetry to survey Iron Age rock art motifs in the Côa Valley: the Vermelhosa Rock 3 case study (Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Portugal)Publication . Botica, Natália; Luís, Luís; Bernardes, Paulo
- – Far from flint: Inferring land-use and social networks from Middle and Upper Palaeolithic lithic assemblages (Cardina-Salto do Boi, Côa Valley, Portugal)Publication . Aubry, Thierry; Barbosa, António Fernando; Gameiro, Cristina; Luís, Luís; Santos, André Tomás; Silvestre, Marcelo
- – L‘art rupestre de la vallée du Côa après de paléolithique : d’un art animalier vers l’affirmation de la figure du guerrierPublication . Aubry, Thierry; Luís, Luís; Barbosa, António Fernando; Santos, André Tomás; Lumley, Henry
- In situ characterization of prehistoric rock paintings: the Côa Valley (Portugal)Publication . Pozo-Antonio, José Santiago; Rivas, Teresa; Barreiro, Pablo; Caetano, Vera; Carrera, Fernando; Alves, Lara Bacelar
- Laying the Côa controversy to restPublication . Bednarik, Robert G.
- Approaching an Upper Palaeolithic ontology by means of the spatial distribution of its rock artPublication . Santos, André Tomás
- Una nueva plaqueta decorada en el valle del Côa (Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Portugal)Publication . Mosquera Castro, Tania; Santos, André Tomás; Triguero, Ignacio; Silvestre, Marcelo; Barbosa, António Fernando; Luís, Luís; Aubry, Thierry
