PlumX Metrics
Embed PlumX Metrics

Following the father steps in the bowels of the earth: The ichnological record from the Basura Cave (upper palaeolithic, Italy)

Reading Prehistoric Human Tracks: Methods & Material, Page: 251-276
2021
  • 4
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 13
    Captures
  • 3
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    4
  • Captures
    13
  • Mentions
    3
    • News Mentions
      2
      • 2
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • 1

Most Recent Blog

Children of the Ice Age

We are informed fortunately by exant cultures living the exact same way even today. These extended families actually support each other by naturally allocating labor

Most Recent News

What it was like to grow up in the Ice Age

Children of the Ice Age With the help of new archaeological approaches, our picture of young lives in the Palaeolithic is now marvellously vivid The

Book Chapter Description

The chapter summarizes the new results of the Basura Revisited Interdisciplinary Research Project. The integrated interpretation of recent archaeological data and palaeosurface laser scans, along with geoarchaeological, sedimentological, geochemical and archaeobotanical analyses, geometric morphometrics and digital photogrammetry, enabled us to reconstruct some activities that an Upper Palaeolithic human group led inside a deep cave in northern Italy within a single exploration event about 14 ka calBP. A complex and diverse track records of humans and other animals shed light on individual-and group-level behaviour, social relationship and mode of exploration of the uneven terrain. Five individuals, composed of two adults, an adolescent and two children, entered the cave barefoot lightening the way with a bunch of wooden sticks (Pinus t. sylvestris/mugo bundles). While proceeding, humans were forced to move on all fours, and the traces they left represent the first report of crawling locomotion in the global human ichnological record. Anatomical details recognizable in the crawling traces show that no clothing was present between limbs and the trampled sediments. Our study demonstrates that very young children (the youngest about 3 years old) were active members of the human groups, even in apparently dangerous and social activities, shedding light on behavioural habits of Upper Palaeolithic populations.

Bibliographic Details

Marco Avanzini; Isabella Salvador; Elisabetta Starnini; Daniele Arobba; Rosanna Caramiello; Marco Romano; Paolo Citton; Ivano Rellini; Marco Firpo; Marta Zunino; Fabio Negrino

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Social Sciences; Arts and Humanities

Provide Feedback

Have ideas for a new metric? Would you like to see something else here?Let us know