Title of article :
Undrowning a lost world — The Marine Isotope Stage 3 landscape of Gibraltar
Author/Authors :
Rodrيguez-Vidal، نويسنده , , Joaquيn and Finlayson، نويسنده , , Geraldine and Finlayson، نويسنده , , Clive and Negro، نويسنده , , Juan J. and Cلceres، نويسنده , , Luis M. and Fa، نويسنده , , Darren A. and Carriَn، نويسنده , , José S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
The Rock of Gibraltar, at the south-western extreme of the Iberian Peninsula and 21 km from the North African coast, is a 6-km long limestone peninsula which was inhabited by Neanderthals from MIS 5e until the end of MIS 3. A total of 8 sites, either with Neanderthal fossils or their Mousterian lithic technology, have been discovered on the Rock. Two, Gorhamʹs and Vanguard Caves, are the subject of ongoing research. These caves are currently at sea level, but during MIS 3 faced an emerged coastal shelf with the shoreline as far as 5 km away at times. They hold a unique archive of fauna and flora, in the form of fossils, charcoal and pollen, helping environmental reconstruction of now-submerged shelf landscapes. In addition, geological and geomorphological features — a 300-metre dune complex, elevated aeolian deposits, raised beaches, scree, speleothems — complement the biotic picture.
rk is further complemented by a study of the ecology of the species recorded at the site, using present-day observations. The species composition in this fossil record closely matches the present day fauna and vegetation of the Doñana National Park, SW Spain: a mosaic of pine groves, coastal dunes, shrubland and seasonal wetlands and currently the richest reserve in terms of biodiversity in the Iberian Peninsula, located only 100 km to the northwest from Gibraltar.
is information permits, for the first time, the quantification of the vegetation structure of the ancient coastal plain and the modelling of the spatio-temporal dynamics of the MIS 3 coastal shelf off Gibraltar.
Keywords :
Western Mediterranean , MIS 3 , Vegetation , Geomorphology , Gibraltar , Neanderthal
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Journal title :
Geomorphology