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Tracking Neanderthals in Time and Space: was the “Quina World” the first regional cultural entity in the history of Europe?

Descripción del proyecto

Estudiar la cultura regional neandertal

Se ha estudiado ampliamente a los neandertales, pero muchos aspectos de su evolución y su comportamiento siguen siendo relativamente desconocidos. Sin embargo, un yacimiento neandertal en el sudoeste de Francia proporciona elementos para comprender mejor esta subespecie extinta de humanos arcaicos. La cultura Musteriense de tipo Quina ofrece pruebas que sugieren una cultura de tipo industrial compleja de cazadores de temporada de renos. Es más, se han descubierto elementos de la cultura Musteriense de tipo Quina en otros yacimientos de Europa. El proyecto financiado con fondos europeos QuinaWorld trabajará sobre la hipótesis de que existió una entidad cultural de tipo La Quina que estuvo activa durante un corto período y de la que eran miembros grupos conectados de neandertales. El proyecto será realizado por un consorcio interdisciplinar con el objetivo de identificar cómo la cultura de La Quina evolucionó en el tiempo y cómo y cuándo se difundió por Europa.

Objetivo

Neanderthals disappeared ~40 000 years ago; although they have received significant public and academic attention, their evolution and behavioural diversity remain little known. Quina Mousterian designates a singular Neanderthal lithic industry; it is often associated with specific, large game seasonal hunting (herds of reindeer). Particular mobility patterns and elaborate carcass processing suggest an image of a complex, intriguing cultural entity. Outside its core area (SW France), Quina Mousterian is also mentioned in different parts of Europe. My project will first aim at testing the hypothesis that a Quina cultural entity existed, i.e. that the occurrences of Quina Mousterian correspond to a short period of time and can thus be attributed to affiliated or connected groups of Neanderthals. A widely interdisciplinary consortium will then aim at defining the characteristics of the assumed Quina entity, how it evolved in time and potentially diffused in space across Europe. High-resolution OSL dating, based on new Bayesian models allowing cutting-edge uncertainties (~2-3%) for periods beyond the radiocarbon dating range, will be implemented to obtain a tight chronological framework and tie the archaeological record with palaeo-environments. Tool production and use, as a function of raw material availability and procurement, will be studied based on a technological and techno-functional approach. The influence of varying climates and environments on the Quina subsistence strategies – approached in terms of both food acquisition and storage – will be deciphered. Palaeo-anthropological and genetic studies will aim at defining the biological identity of the makers of Quina Mousterian, and possible human migrations associated with its diffusion. Eventually, the Quina World project will allow discussing the potentially oldest regionalisation and cultural diffusion patterns of Europe, and shed new light on the array and complexity of Neanderthal behaviours.

Régimen de financiación

ERC-STG - Starting Grant

Institución de acogida

CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 1 620 711,50
Dirección
RUE MICHEL ANGE 3
75794 Paris
Francia

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Región
Ile-de-France Ile-de-France Paris
Tipo de actividad
Research Organisations
Enlaces
Coste total
€ 1 620 711,50

Beneficiarios (2)