In prehistoric times, the eastern Italian Alps (i.e. the Dolomites, Trentino-South Tyrol, and the Veneto Prealps) constituted a connecting region between Central Europe and the Mediterranean, which, despite its imposing nature, has been crossed by humans since the Mesolithic. The Adige and Eisack valleys, culminating in mid-altitude mountain passes such as Reschen and Brenner, provided essential north-south corridors for the circulation of people, objects, and ideas. The importance of the eastern Italian Alps began during the Mesolithic and increased in the Neolithic (ca. 5300-3500 BCE) as a result of the exploitation of lithic resources (chert), particularly abundant in the Monti Lessini. From Late Copper Age, half of the 3rd millennium BCE onwards, the supplying of rich copper deposits, mainly in the Valsugana Valley, further enhanced the relevance of the region.
Within the EU-funded MOLA project, bioarchaeological data derived from oxygen, sulfur, and strontium isotope analyses of cremated (only Sr) and inhumed individuals buried in the eastern Italian Alps have been integrated with advanced spatial modelling techniques.
MOLA aimed to: (1) identify how Alpine landscape conditions constrained human-environment interactions from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age in the eastern Italian Alps; (2) understand the spatial variations of bioavailable strontium isotopes in the eastern Italian Alps and model a high resolution strontium isoscape; (3) characterise the intra-individual, intra- and inter-site isotopic variations in inhumed and cremated human remains from Neolithic to Bronze Age burials located in the same area; (4) unravel how social strategies influenced, male and female, individual and collective, mobility and life histories as well as the use of funerary spaces during the Neolithic, the Copper Age, and the Bronze Age in this mountainous region.