| Literature DB >> 29962659 |
Leonardo García Sanjuán1, Juan Manuel Vargas Jiménez2, Luis Miguel Cáceres Puro3, Manuel Eleazar Costa Caramé1, Marta Díaz-Guardamino Uribe4, Marta Díaz-Zorita Bonilla5, Álvaro Fernández Flores6, Víctor Hurtado Pérez1, Pedro M López Aldana7, Elena Méndez Izquierdo7, Ana Pajuelo Pando7, Joaquín Rodríguez Vidal3, David Wheatley8, Christopher Bronk Ramsey9, Antonio Delgado-Huertas10, Elaine Dunbar11, Adrián Mora González10, Alex Bayliss12,13, Nancy Beavan4, Derek Hamilton11, Alasdair Whittle4.
Abstract
The great site of Valencina de la Concepción, near Seville in the lower Guadalquivir valley of southwest Spain, is presented in the context of debate about the nature of Copper Age society in southern Iberia as a whole. Many aspects of the layout, use, character and development of Valencina remain unclear, just as there are major unresolved questions about the kind of society represented there and in southern Iberia, from the late fourth to the late third millennium cal BC. This paper discusses 178 radiocarbon dates, from 17 excavated sectors within the c. 450 ha site, making it the best dated in later Iberian prehistory as a whole. Dates are modelled in a Bayesian statistical framework. The resulting formal date estimates provide the basis for both a new epistemological approach to the site and a much more detailed narrative of its development than previously available. Beginning in the 32nd century cal BC, a long-lasting tradition of simple, mainly collective and often successive burial was established at the site. Mud-vaulted tholoi appear to belong to the 29th or 28th centuries cal BC; large stone-vaulted tholoi such as La Pastora appear to date later in the sequence. There is plenty of evidence for a wide range of other activity, but no clear sign of permanent, large-scale residence or public buildings or spaces. Results in general support a model of increasingly competitive but ultimately unstable social relations, through various phases of emergence, social competition, display and hierarchisation, and eventual decline, over a period of c. 900 years.Entities:
Keywords: Copper Age; Formal chronological modelling; Mortuary practice; Radiocarbon dating; Settlement; Social change; Southern Iberia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29962659 PMCID: PMC5984651 DOI: 10.1007/s10963-018-9114-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J World Prehist ISSN: 0892-7537