Listar IUX-CULXEO - Artigos por autor "Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora"
Mostrando ítems 1-18 de 18
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A western route of prehistoric human migration from Africa into the Iberian Peninsula
González Fortes, Gloria; Tassi, Franco; Trucchi, Emiliano; Henneberger, Kirstin; Paijmans, Johanna L. A.; Díez del Molino, David; Schroeder, Hannes; Susca, Roberta Rosa; Barroso-Ruíz, Cecilio; Bermúdez, Francisco J.; Barroso-Medina, C.; Bettencourt, Ana M. S.; Sampaio, Hugo Aluai; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Salas, Antonio; Lombera Hermida, Arturo de; Fábregas Valcarce, Ramón; Vaquero, Manuel; Alonso, Susana; Lozano, Marina; Rodríguez, Xosé Pedro; Fernández-Rodríguez, Carlos; Manica, Andrea; Hofreiter, Michael; Barbujani, Guido (The Royal Society, 2019-01-23)[Abstract] Being at the western fringe of Europe, Iberia had a peculiar prehistory and a complex pattern of Neolithization. A few studies, all based on modern populations, reported the presence of DNA of likely African ... -
Aeolization on the Atlantic Coast of Galicia (NW Spain) From the End of the Last Glacial Period to the Present Day: Chronology, Origin and Evolution of Coastal Dunes Linked to Sea-Level Oscillations
Arce-Chamorro, Carlos; Vidal Romaní, Juan Ramón; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Sanjurjo-Sánchez, Jorge (Wiley, 2022-10-05)[Abstract] The Atlantic coast of Galicia (NW Spain) is a high-energy environment where shingle beaches are currently developing. These coarser sediments alternate with sandy deposits which are also considered as beaches ... -
Biomechanical simulations reveal a trade-off between adaptation to glacial climate and dietary niche versatility in European cave bears
Pérez-Ramos, Alejandro; Tseng, Z. Jack; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Rabeder, G.; Pastor, Francisco J.; Figueirido, Borja (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2020-04-01)[Abstract] The cave bear is one of the best known extinct large mammals that inhabited Europe during the “Ice Age,” becoming extinct ≈24,000 years ago along with other members of the Pleistocene megafauna. Long-standing ... -
Characterising the Cave Bear Ursus Spelaeus Rosenmüller by Zooms: A Review of Peptide Mass Fingerprinting Markers
García-Vázquez, Ana; Pinto-Llona, Ana C.; Maroto, Julià; Torres, Trinidad; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora (Cambridge University Press, 2023-02-27)[Abstract] In the last decade, the identification of bone fragments by peptide mass fingerprinting or zooarchaeology by mass spectrometry is developing as a powerful tool in Quaternary palaeontology. The sequence of amino ... -
Dogs and Foxes in Early-Middle Bronze Age Funerary Structures in the Northeast of the Iberian Peninsula: Human Control of Canid Diet at the Sites of Can Roqueta (Barcelona) and Minferri (Lleida)
Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Albizuri, Silvia; Nieto-Espinet, Ariadna; Majó, Tona; Agustí, Bibiana; Alonso Martínez, Natàlia; Antolín, Ferran; López Melción, Joan B.; Moya, Andreu; Rodríguez, Alba; Palomo Pérez, Antoni (Springer, 2019-01-14)[Abstract] Findings of canid remains in graves at different sites in the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula are evidence of a widespread funerary practice that proliferated between the end of the 3rd and the 2nd millennium ... -
Dogs that Ate Plants: Changes in the Canine Diet During the Late Bronze Age and the First Iron Age in the Northeast Iberian Peninsula
Albizuri, Silvia; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Maroto, Julià; Oliva, Mònica; Rodríguez, Alba; Terrats, Noemí; Palomo Pérez, Antoni; López-Cachero, F. Javier (Springer, 2021-03-25)[Abstract] We studied 36 dogs (Canis familiaris) from the Can Roqueta site in the Catalan pre-littoral depression (Barcelona), dated between the Late Bronze Age and the First Iron Age (1300 and 550 cal BC). We used a sample ... -
Eating in silence: isotopic approaches to nuns' diet at the convent of Santa Catalina de Siena (Belmonte, Spain) from the sixteenth to the twentieth century
Sarkic, Natasa; Herrerín López, Jesús; López-Costas, Olalla; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora (Springer Nature, 2019-08)[Abstract] Advances in geochemical and physical anthropological studies have provided new tools to reconstruct ancient lifestyles, especially of those minorities not commonly mentioned in historical texts. In comparison ... -
Equine diet during protohistoric times in the Northeast of the Iberian Peninsula: Stable isotope data (C, N) from bone collagen
Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Albizuri, Silvia; López-Cachero, F. Javier (Elsevier, 2021-09-16)[Abstract] The analysis of stable isotopes in bone collagen allows us to infer the diet of the animals studied. This dataset consists of isotopic signatures (δ13C and δ15N) obtained by isotope ratio mass spectrometry from ... -
Insight into the introduction of domestic cattle and the process of Neolithization to the Spanish region Galicia by genetic evidence
Gurke, Marie; Vidal-Gorosquieta, Amalia; Pajimans, Johanna L. A.; Wȩcek, Karolina; Barlow, Axel; González Fortes, Gloria; Hartmann, Stefanie; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Hofreiter, Michael (PLOS, 2021-04-28)[Abstract] Domestic cattle were brought to Spain by early settlers and agricultural societies. Due to missing Neolithic sites in the Spanish region of Galicia, very little is known about this process in this region. We ... -
Isotopic Signature in Isolated South-Western Populations of European Brown Bear (Ursus Arctos)
García-Vázquez, Ana; Crampton, Denise A.; Lamb, Angela; Wolff, George; Kiriakoulakis, Kostas; Guidarelli, Giulia; Loy, Anna; Ciucci, Paolo; Groff, Claudio; Pinto, Ana; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Meloro, Carlo (Springer Link, 2022-10-21)[Abstract] Stable isotope analysis of animal tissue samples is increasingly used to study the trophic ecology of target species. The isotopic signatures respond to the type of diet, but also to the environmental conditions ... -
Morphological, Isotopic and Proteomic Study of the Pleistocene and Holocene Fauna of Cova Dos Santos (Abadín, Lugo, NW Spain)
García-Vázquez, Ana; Vaqueiro Rodríguez, Marcos; Guitián Fernández, Esteban; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora (Sociedad Española de Paleontología, 2021-12-03)[Abstract] Cova dos Santos is a karstic cavity in Abadín (Lugo), in a hitherto unexplored area that may have been the natural route between the well-known Quaternary faunas of the Cantabrian Mountain Range and those located ... -
Multi-Isotopic Study of the Earliest Mediaeval Inhabitants of Santiago de Compostela (Galicia, Spain)
Pérez-Ramallo, Patxi; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Organista, Elia; Santos, Elena; Chivall, David; Rodríguez-Varela, Ricardo; Götherström, Anders; Etxeberría Gabilondo, Francisco; Ilgner, Jana; Fernandes, Ricardo; Arsuaga, Juan Luis; Le Roux, Petrus; Higham, Tom; Beaumont, Julia; Koon, Hannah; Roberts, Patrick (Springer Link, 2022-10-12)[Abstract] Santiago de Compostela is, together with Rome and Jerusalem, one of the three main pilgrimage and religious centres for Catholicism. The belief that the remains of St James the Great, one of the twelve apostles ... -
Neanderthal Use of Animal Bones as Retouchers at the Level XV of the Sopeña Rock Shelter (Asturias, Northern Spain)
Romero, Antonio J.; Yravedra, José; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Pinto-Llona, Ana C. (Wiley, 2023-12-14)[Abstract] Bone retouchers are a technological appliance used to perfect lithic tools efficiently. They are most frequently found in Middle Palaeolithic contexts. In this paper, we present a group of bone retouchers from ... -
Paleogenomic evidence for multi-generational mixing between Neolithic farmers and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in the lower Danube basin
González Fortes, Gloria; Jones, Eppie R.; Lightfoot, Emma; Bonsall, Clive; Lazar, Catalin; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Garralda, María Dolores; Drak, Labib; Siska, Veronika; Simalcsik, Angela; Boroneanţ, Adina; Vidal Romaní, Juan Ramón; Vaqueiro Rodríguez, Marcos; Arias Cabal, Pablo; Pinhasi, Ron; Manica, Andrea; Hofreiter, Michael (Cell, 2017-05-25)[Abstract] The transition from hunting and gathering to farming involved profound cultural and technological changes. In Western and Central Europe, these changes occurred rapidly and synchronously after the arrival of ... -
Post-glacial Colonization of Western Europe Brown Bears From a Cryptic Atlantic Refugium Out of the Iberian Peninsula
García-Vázquez, Ana; Pinto-Llona, Ana C.; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora (Taylor & Francis, 2017-10-04)[Abstract] The European brown bear (Ursus arctos) shows a particular phylogeography that has been used to illustrate the model for contraction-expansion dynamics related to glacial refugia in Southern European peninsulas. ... -
Sorting the Riddle of the Neanderthal to Anatomically Modern Human Boundary in Sopeña (Asturias, Spain): New Dates and a Preliminar Bayesian Analysis
Pinto, Ana; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora (Elsevier, 2022-09-02)[Abstract] Sopeña is a limestone shelter in the northern slopes of the Cantabrian range of mountains of northern Spain. A long sequence of in situ nearly undisturbed archaeological strata has been documented there, including ... -
The Cave Bear’s Hibernation: Reconstructing the Physiology and Behaviour of an Extinct Animal
Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Pérez Rama, Marta; García-Vázquez, Ana; González Fortes, Gloria (Taylor & Francis, 2018-05-02)[Abstract] When studying an extinct species such as the cave bear (Ursus spelaeus ROSENMÜLLER 1794), it is possible to apply a variety of molecular biology techniques such as the study of stable isotopes or mitochondrial ... -
To the Field of Stars: Stable Isotope Analysis of Medieval Pilgrims and Populations Along the Camino de Santiago in Navarre and Aragon, Spain
Pérez-Ramallo, Patxi; Lorenzo Lizalde, José Ignacio; Staniewska, Alexandra; Aiestaran, Mattin; Aguirre, Juantxo; Sesma Sesma, Jesús; Marzo, Sara; Lucas, Mary; Ilgner, Jana; Chivall, David; Higham, Tom; Rodríguez-Varela, Ricardo; Götherström, Anders; Etxeberría Gabilondo, Francisco; Grandal-d'Anglade, Aurora; Alexander, Michelle; Roberts, Patrick (Elsevier, 2023-02-01)[Abstract] The Camino de Santiago emerged in the first half of the 9th century CE following the reported discovery of the remains of the Apostle St James by the bishop of Iria-Flavia, Teodomiro. Since then, hundreds of ...