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The time between Palaeolithic hearths.

Ángela Herrejón LagunillaJuan José VillalaínFrancisco Javier Pavón-CarrascoMario Serrano Sánchez-BravoSantiago Sossa-RíosAlejandro MayorBertila GalvánCristo M HernándezCarolina MallolÁngel Carrancho
Published in: Nature (2024)
Resolving the timescale of human activity in the Palaeolithic Age is one of the most challenging problems in prehistoric archaeology. The duration and frequency of hunter-gatherer camps reflect key aspects of social life and human-environment interactions. However, the time dimension of Palaeolithic contexts is generally inaccurately reconstructed because of the limitations of dating techniques 1 , the impact of disturbing agents on sedimentary deposits 2 and the palimpsest effect 3,4 . Here we report high-resolution time differences between six Middle Palaeolithic hearths from El Salt Unit X (Spain) obtained through archaeomagnetic and archaeostratigraphic analyses. The set of hearths covers at least around 200-240 years with 99% probability, having decade- and century-long intervals between the different hearths. Our results provide a quantitative estimate of the time framework for the human occupation events included in the studied sequence. This is a step forward in Palaeolithic archaeology, a discipline in which human behaviour is usually approached from a temporal scale typical of geological processes, whereas significant change may happen at the smaller scales of human generations. Here we reach a timescale close to a human lifespan.
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