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Eco-cultural niches of the Badegoulian: Unraveling links between cultural adaptation and ecology during the Last Glacial Maximum in France
Authors:William E. Banks,Thierry Aubry,Francesco d&rsquo  Errico,Joã  o Zilhã  o,André  s Lira-Noriega,A. Townsend Peterson
Affiliation:aCNRS, UMR 5199 – PACEA, Université Bordeaux 1, Batiment B18, Avenue des Facultés, 33405 Talence, France;bBiodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd., Dyche Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045-7562, United States;cMuseu do Côa, IGESPAR, I.P., Ministério da Cultura de Portugal, Rua do Museu, 5150-610 Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Portugal;dInstitute for Human Evolution, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;eUniversity of Barcelona, Faculty of Geography and History, Department of Prehisory, Ancient History, and Archaeology. C. Montalegre 6, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:This study details an application of eco-cultural niche modeling (ECNM) using two modeling architectures—a genetic algorithm (GARP) and maximum entropy (Maxent)—aimed at examining the ecological context of sites with archaeological remains attributed to the culture termed the Badegoulian (ca. 22–20 k cal BP), which dates to the middle part of the Last Glacial Maximum (ca. 23–19 k cal BP). We reconstructed the ecological niche of the Badegoulian and assessed whether eco-cultural niche variability existed within this technocomplex. We identified two broad but distinct spatial entities in the distribution of Badegoulian sites based on lithic raw material sources and circulation, and found that these spatial units share a similar ecological niche. We discuss the implications of territorial differentiation within this niche in light of research on land use by culturally affiliated groups within a broad cultural entity. We propose that Badegoulian circulation networks reflect distinct social territories associated with particular conditions within a single ecological niche. This study illustrates the utility of combining ecological niche reconstructions with archaeological data to identify and evaluate diachronic trends in cultural continuity for situations where such patterns may be missed when the focus of study is restricted solely to lithic technology and typology.
Keywords:Eco-cultural niche modeling   Badegoulian   Last Glacial Maximum   Upper Paleolithic   Cultural territory
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