Macromammal and bird assemblages across the Late Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition in Italy: an extended zooarchaeological review
Matteo Romandini, Jacopo Crezzini, Eugenio Bortolini, Paolo Boscato,, Francesco Boschin, Lisa Carrera, Nicola Nannini, Antonio Tagliacozzo,, Gabriele Terlato, Simona Arrighi, Federica Badino, Carla Figus, Federico, Lugli, Giulia Marciani, Gregorio Oxilia, Adriana Moroni

TL;DR
This study reviews zooarchaeological evidence from Italy spanning 50 to 35 thousand years ago, revealing shifts in subsistence, ecological settings, and faunal exploitation during the Late Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of faunal assemblages across multiple Italian sites, highlighting ecological and cultural changes during this key transitional period.
Findings
Increase in hunted taxa since Middle Palaeolithic
Shift to cooler, more humid ecological settings in Protoaurignacian
Changes in faunal exploitation and butchering practices
Abstract
Evidence of human activities during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is well represented from rock_shelters, caves and open_air sites across Italy. Over the past decade, both the revision of taphonomic processes affecting archaeological faunal assemblages and new zooarchaeological studies have allowed archaeologists to better understand subsistence strategies and cultural behaviors attributed to groups of Neandertal and modern humans living in the region. This work presents the preliminary results of a 5 years research programme (ERC n. 724046_SUCCESS) and offers a state_of_the_art synthesis of archaeological faunal assemblages including mammals and birds uncovered in Italy between 50 and 35 ky ago. The present data were recovered in primary Late Mousterian, Uluzzian, and Protoaurignacian stratigraphic contexts from Northern Italy (Grotta di Fumane, Riparo del Broion, Grotta…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
