The Contribution of Open-Air Sites to the Environmental Reconstruction of the Gravettian at the "Basque Crossroads" (North Iberia)"
Quaternary International 412(Part A) : 54-65 (2016)
Abstract
The reconstruction of the Cantabrian Gravettian and its palaeoenvironmental sequence is based on cave
stratigraphies, which generally indicate a very rigorous climate (intense cold, occasionally dry and other
times attenuated by the humidity). However, as open-air deposits are increasingly studied (Ametzagaina,
Irikaitz and Mugarduia South), other situations are being detected in the Gravettian, with much milder
conditions. We can now criticise the simplistic view of the Gravettian as a period governed solely by
intensely cold conditions and look through the window of opportunity offered by the open-air camps to
observe completely different landscapes and environments. Consequently, in the cold Heinrich events
caves would have been inhabited, while in more temperate times (such as the DansgaardeOeschger
cycles) the habitat would have been preferentially in the open-air. The historiographic and methodological
over-emphasis on cave sites has created a mirage that is reinforced by every new study in such
locations. The difficulties of all kind involved in locating, excavating and dating open-air sites adequately
has led us to believe they did not exist or their contribution was unnecessary to draw a global picture of
the period. The most extreme case is the flint workshop of Mugarduia South (Navarre) at over 900 m
above sea level, nearly 60 km from the modern coast and in a palaeobotanic environment dominated by
deciduous species.