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The Landes de Gascogne (southwest France): periglacial desert and cultural frontier during the Palaeolithic
Authors:Pascal Bertran  Luca Sitzia  William E Banks  Mark D Bateman  Pierre-Yves Demars  Marion Hernandez  Michel Lenoir  Norbert Mercier  Frédéric Prodeo
Institution:1. Université Bordeaux, CNRS, PACEA, UMR 5199, Bâtiment de Géologie, 33405 Talence Cedex, France;2. INRAP, 156 Avenue Jean Jaurès, 33600 Pessac, France;3. Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd., Dyche Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045-7562, USA;4. Geography Department, The University of Sheffield, Winter Street, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK;5. Université Bordeaux, CNRS, CRPAA, UMR 5060, Maison de l''Archéologie, 33607 Pessac Cedex, France;6. INRAP, Domaine de Campagne, 24260 Campagne, France
Abstract:During the last glacial period, a large part of the Aquitaine basin (southwest France) was a periglacial desert comprising coversands with low-relief dune fields surrounded by loess accumulations. OSL and radiocarbon dates show that the phase of maximum sand deposition coincides with Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2. Peats and gleyic palaeosoils intercalated within the sands at some sites indicate that vegetation cover was able to develop locally during short events, possibly D–O interstadials, due to raised groundwater levels in interdunal depressions. Few Palaeolithic sites have been discovered in the coversand area in contrast to the peripheral loess region. Systematic survey along a future highway corridor demonstrates that this paucity of sites is not the result of insufficient survey nor deep site burial, but rather reflects an archaeological reality. This strongly suggests that the sand area was not attractive for hunter–gatherer populations due to its reduced levels of water resources, and available vegetation and animal biomass. The distribution of cultural markers such as art items and projectile points also shows that the coversand area probably acted as a barrier separating two different cultural sub-areas, one in the Pyrenees and Cantabria, the other in the Périgord. As a consequence, the commonly accepted view that southwest France, as a whole, served as a refugia during the cold and arid phases of the Pleistocene should be replaced by a more complex one that reflects the fact that a large part of the territory was almost unoccupied and that human populations were concentrated along alluvial valleys.
Keywords:Periglacial desert  Upper Palaeolithic  Palaeolithic settlement  Southwest France
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