The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece

An intensive, target-oriented surface survey conducted in the Megalopolis basin during 2012-2013 led to the discovery of several Palaeolithic sites and findspots with lithics and faunal remains, including Marathousa-1, a Lower Palaeolithic open-air elephant-butchering site, dated to ca. 400-500 ka B...

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Published in:Journal of Lithic Studies
Main Authors: Dalila De Caro, Vangelis Tourloukis, Nicholas Thomson, Aristeidis Varis, Eleni Panagopoulou, Katerina Harvati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2024-02-01
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Online Access:https://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/7716
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author Dalila De Caro
Vangelis Tourloukis
Nicholas Thomson
Aristeidis Varis
Eleni Panagopoulou
Katerina Harvati
author_facet Dalila De Caro
Vangelis Tourloukis
Nicholas Thomson
Aristeidis Varis
Eleni Panagopoulou
Katerina Harvati
author_sort Dalila De Caro
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Lithic Studies
description An intensive, target-oriented surface survey conducted in the Megalopolis basin during 2012-2013 led to the discovery of several Palaeolithic sites and findspots with lithics and faunal remains, including Marathousa-1, a Lower Palaeolithic open-air elephant-butchering site, dated to ca. 400-500 ka BP. This study presents the results from the techno-typological analysis of 413 lithic artefacts collected as surface or stratified finds during the survey research. The aim of the work is to evaluate the diachronic occupation of the area in relation to the lithic technologies used, the typology of the artefacts, and the raw materials exploited. It was possible to provide a chrono-cultural attribution of 167 artefacts, ranging from the Lower Palaeolithic to the Holocene, with a significant component of the collection attributed to the Middle Palaeolithic. Several diagnostic retouched tools allow us to infer that the open-air sites were occupied comparatively more intensively during the Middle Palaeolithic period. We also provide a detailed account of the lithic assemblage from Kavia cave, a previously unstudied site identified during the survey. The high frequency of artefacts pertaining to the Upper Palaeolithic in Kavia is in line with previously identified settlement and mobility patterns of the Peloponnese, where the occupation of caves becomes more intensive from the Upper Palaeolithic onward, as attested at the sites of Klissoura, Kephalari, and Franchthi. The Upper Palaeolithic component from Kavia Cave adds new data to a meagre sample of known sites from this period. The results from the typological and technological analysis of the lithic assemblages collected during the survey in Megalopolis support the conclusions of the basin's long-term and ongoing research, indicating a relatively continuous hominin presence during the Pleistocene.
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spelling doaj-art-c8dacc27232a40b99efa6dbf0d755da82025-09-25T11:28:26ZengUniversity of EdinburghJournal of Lithic Studies2055-04722024-02-0111129 p.29 p.10.2218/jls.77166274The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, GreeceDalila De Caro0Vangelis Tourloukis1Nicholas Thomson2Aristeidis Varis3Eleni PanagopoulouKaterina Harvati4Institute of Archaeological Sciences, University of TübingenInstitute of Archaeological Sciences, University of TübingenInstitute of Archaeological Sciences, University of TübingenInstitute of Archaeological Sciences, University of TübingenInstitute of Archaeological Sciences, University of TübingenAn intensive, target-oriented surface survey conducted in the Megalopolis basin during 2012-2013 led to the discovery of several Palaeolithic sites and findspots with lithics and faunal remains, including Marathousa-1, a Lower Palaeolithic open-air elephant-butchering site, dated to ca. 400-500 ka BP. This study presents the results from the techno-typological analysis of 413 lithic artefacts collected as surface or stratified finds during the survey research. The aim of the work is to evaluate the diachronic occupation of the area in relation to the lithic technologies used, the typology of the artefacts, and the raw materials exploited. It was possible to provide a chrono-cultural attribution of 167 artefacts, ranging from the Lower Palaeolithic to the Holocene, with a significant component of the collection attributed to the Middle Palaeolithic. Several diagnostic retouched tools allow us to infer that the open-air sites were occupied comparatively more intensively during the Middle Palaeolithic period. We also provide a detailed account of the lithic assemblage from Kavia cave, a previously unstudied site identified during the survey. The high frequency of artefacts pertaining to the Upper Palaeolithic in Kavia is in line with previously identified settlement and mobility patterns of the Peloponnese, where the occupation of caves becomes more intensive from the Upper Palaeolithic onward, as attested at the sites of Klissoura, Kephalari, and Franchthi. The Upper Palaeolithic component from Kavia Cave adds new data to a meagre sample of known sites from this period. The results from the typological and technological analysis of the lithic assemblages collected during the survey in Megalopolis support the conclusions of the basin's long-term and ongoing research, indicating a relatively continuous hominin presence during the Pleistocene.https://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/7716surveypalaeolithicsouthern balkanslithic technologymegalopolis
spellingShingle Dalila De Caro
Vangelis Tourloukis
Nicholas Thomson
Aristeidis Varis
Eleni Panagopoulou
Katerina Harvati
The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
survey
palaeolithic
southern balkans
lithic technology
megalopolis
title The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
title_full The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
title_fullStr The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
title_full_unstemmed The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
title_short The lithic assemblages from the Palaeolithic survey research in the Megalopolis Basin, Greece
title_sort lithic assemblages from the palaeolithic survey research in the megalopolis basin greece
topic survey
palaeolithic
southern balkans
lithic technology
megalopolis
url https://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/7716
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