The new and extensive fieldwork program developed for the MedCoRes project has permitted to extract a series of 16 geological boreholes of about 15 meters deep in the wetland of Pego-Oliva allowing investigating the evolution in three-dimensions of the basin sedimentary infilling over time. Back to the laboratory, the composition of the sediments has been characterized, both looking for the mineral and biological contents in order to give precise information on the past ecosystems. Second, thanks to the fined-tuned radiocarbon chronology that we built, the environmental evolution have been precisely compared with the archaeological sites located in the close vicinity, especially with the long-lasting Mesolithic site of El Collado (Oliva), exceptional for the rich material that have been recovered, including human burial and exploited shellfish. The temporal concomitances of the coastal environmental changes with past human record have permitted to decipher processes at the origin of the human evolution in this region. The results, of high-interest, have been published in an outstanding journal of the field (Brisset et al., 2018a – Global and Planetary Changes), and disseminated in one workshop (Brisset et al., 2017), two conferences (Brisset et al., 2018b, 2018c; Fernández-López de Pablo et al., 2018) and one poster exhibition (Brisset, 2018). Based on these new results, a series of outreach activities (i.e. regional radio, online press, poster exhibition, and activity on social media) have been done in order to raise public awareness on the impacts of sea-level rise on coastal areas using the broader perspective given by the history.
References:
-BRISSET E., BURJACHS F., BALLESTEROS NAVARRO B. J., FERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ de PABLO J., 2018a. Socio-ecological adaptation to Early-Holocene sea-level rise in the western Mediterranean. Global and Planetary Changes, 169, 156-167.
-BRISSET E., FERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ de PABLO J., BURJACHS F., 2018b. Reconstruction and impact of seascape evolution on human communities during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Mediterranean Iberia. 24th meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists, Barcelona, Spain.
-BRISSET E., FERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ de PABLO J., BURJACHS F., 2018c. The coastal palaeoenvironmental evolution of Pego-Oliva during the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition (Western Mediterranean): A contribution to the “Maritime Pioneer Colonization Model”. 24th meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists. Barcelona, Spain.
-BRISSET E., 2018. Mediterranean Coastal Resources: benefits and constraints for Prehistoric hunters-gatherers”, final results of the MedCoRes project (MSCA-IF-2015, Marie Sklodowska-Curie Individual Fellowships no. 704822). IPHES’s poster exhibition (12/2018-01/2019). Tarragona, Spain.
-FERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ de PABLO J., BRISSET E., POLO A., RABUÑAL J.R. GÓMEZ-PUCHE M., BURJACHS F., 2018. Early Holocene socio-ecological dynamics in the central Mediterranean region of Iberia. XVIIIe world UISPP Congress. Paris, France.
-BRISSET E., BURJACHS F., FERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ de PABLO J., 2017. First results of the MedCoRes project and research perspectives (Mediterranean Coastal Resources: benefit and constraint for Prehistoric hunter-gatherer). Workshop “Between sea and ocean: archaeology and coastal landscapes”. Empúries, Spain.