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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Unlike other Upper Paleolithic industries, Gravettian assemblages from the Swabian Jura are documented solely
in the Ach Valley (35-30 Kcal BP). On the other hand, traces of contemporaneous occupations in the nearby Lone
Valley are sparse. It is debated whether this gap is due to a phase of human depopulation, or taphonomic issues
related with landscape changes.
In this paper we present ERT, EC-logging and GPR data showing that in both Ach and Lone valleys sediments
and archaeological materials eroded from caves and deposited above river incisions after 37-32 Kcal BP. We
argued that the rate of cave erosion was higher after phases of downcutting, when hillside erosion was more
intensive. To investigate on the causes responsible for the dearth of Gravettian materials in the Lone Valley we
test two alternative hypotheses: i) Gravettian humans occupied less intensively this part of the Swabian Jura. ii)
Erosion of cave deposits did not occur at the same time in the two valleys. We conclude that the second hypothesis
is most likely. Ages from the Lone Valley show increasing multimillennial gaps between 36 and 18 Kcal
BP, while a similar gap is present in the Ach Valley between 28 and 16 Kcal BP. Based on geoarchaeological data
from previous studies and presented in this paper, we interpreted these gaps in radiocarbon data as indicating of
cave erosion. Furthermore, we argued that the time difference across the two valleys show that the erosion of
cave deposits began and terminated earlier in the Lone Valley, resulting in a more intensive removal of
Gravettian-aged deposits. The hypothesis that cave erosion was triggered by regional landscape changes seems to
be supported by geochronological data from the Danube Valley, which show that terrace formation at the end of
the Pleistocene moved westwards throughout southern Germany with a time lag of few millennia.
Description
Keywords
Hiatus Paleolithic archaeology Pleistocene Geoarchaeology Danube Swabian Jura Gravettian ERT EC-Logging GPR
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier