IDACOR   23984
INSTITUTO DE ANTROPOLOGIA DE CORDOBA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Studies of modern and archaeological microvertebrates in the Ongamira valley: Taphonom, taxonomy, paleoenvironmental conditions and models of human occupation in the north of the Córdoba provence (Central Argentina)
Autor/es:
CATTÁNEO ROXANA; MIGNINO JULIAN; ROBLEDO ANDRÉS; IZETA, ANDRÉS
Lugar:
Ankara
Reunión:
Congreso; 13th ICAZ International Conference; 2018
Institución organizadora:
International Council of Archaeozoology
Resumen:
The studies of microvertebrates in archaeological contexts with different physiognomies refer to a long tradition throughout the world, and a substantial development in the last three decades of zooarchaeological research in Argentina. The province of Córdoba has analysis of this kind of sets, although the productions are meager and are limited almost entirely to the understanding of sets of small vertebrates as a complement to human diet. Nevertheless, the presence of microvertebrates in archaeological sites can be attributed to a variety of causes, including natural ones, such as the regurgitation of microvertebrates consumed by various predators. Determining the origin of these remains is therefore of great importance to our understanding of site formation processes. In addition, the detailed study of these remains can provide complementary data on such topics as the composition of biocenoses, palaeoenvironments and the seasonality of deposits. In this study, we analyzed modern sets of regurgitated pellets (n=240) of the barn owl (Tyto alba: Tytonidae) from the Alero Deodoro Roca site (ADR), Ongamira, Córdoba, Argentina. We compared the results with those from archaeological microvertebrates (NISP=700) from excavations at ADR, La Gruta and PNO1 dating to the Late Holocene (ca. 1900?3600 years BP). Most of the archaeological assemblages show the same composition as those of the modern pellets produced by Strigiformes. However, we observed variation in the representation of taxa, reflecting environmental changes over time. Using current temperature and humidity data to compare the assemblages, we observed that some results could be related to Holocenic climatic variations, already described by other studies. Furthermore, this research suggests that Strigiformes may occupy the rockshelters in Autumn-Winter, at which time the site (ADR) would not have been occupied so intensely by human populations.