Southwest Europe (7,821 – 6,094 BCE): Early…
28577 BCE to 7822 BCE
Southwest Europe (7,821 – 6,094 BCE): Early Holocene — Epipaleolithic Shores, Deglacial Lagoons, and Forest–River–Sea Mosaics
Geographic & Environmental Context
Southwest Europe braided two kindred but distinct coastal realms into a single, water-bound region:
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Mediterranean Southwest Europe—the Rhône–Camargue and Languedoc–Roussillon lagoon belt; Provençallimestone massifs and southern Jura passes; the Ebro, Turia–Júcar–Segura, Tiber, and Po valleys; the islands of Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, and the Balearics (sparsely visited at most), with Malta still unpeopled. Postglacial transgression stabilized wide back-barrier basins along the Gulf of Lion and northern Adriatic; oak–hazel–juniper woods reoccupied lowlands and foothills, while interior plateaus (e.g., Extremadura, La Mancha, Aragon) held mixed woodland–steppe mosaics.
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Atlantic Southwest Europe—the Cantabrian and Galician littorals and central–northern Portugal (including Lisbon), grading inland along the Douro, Mondego, and Tagus corridors. Deglacial lowstands left broad sandy aprons and ria-like embayments that, with rising seas, evolved into estuaries and marshy backwaters; pine–oak–hazel canopies spread from the coastal ranges into lower plateaus.
Together these belts formed an integrated coast–valley–upland system in which rivers braided into estuaries, estuaries into lagoon chains, and upland tracks into coastal cabotage routes.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The Holocene Thermal Maximum brought sustained warmth and reliable precipitation:
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Bølling–Allerød (c. 14.7–12.9 ka): A humid pulse greened Iberian and Italian lowlands; dunes and exposed shelves sprouted scrub; meltwater-fed deltas (e.g., Ebro, Po) aggraded rapidly.
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Younger Dryas (c. 12.9–11.7 ka): A sharp cold–dry interlude opened grasslands in the Meseta and Po plain; shoreline resources became critical buffers.
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Early Holocene (post-11.7 ka): Climatic stabilization accelerated estuary and lagoon maturation, strengthened oak–hazel forest returns, and locked coastlines near their modern traces.
Subsistence & Settlement
A shared semi-sedentary, broad-spectrum economy crystallized, expressed differently across the two subregions:
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Mediterranean arc:
• Coasts & lagoons: Dense shell-midden villages ringed Languedoc and Camargue; weirs, stake-traps, and nets targeted mullet, eels, and seasonal shoals; waterfowl, turtles, and stranded cetaceans augmented protein.
• Inland valleys & massifs: Foragers ranged into oak–hazel ravines and Provençal and southern Jura hills for red deer, wild boar, ibex, and heavy hazelnut/acorn harvests; early pile-supported platforms appeared in wet hollows.
• Islands: Sardinia and Sicily hosted Epigravettian/Mesolithic cave and cove stations (ibex, red deer, littoral fish/shellfish); Balearics were only sporadically visited; Malta remained unpeopled. -
Atlantic arc:
• Rias & estuaries: Foragers in Cantabria and Galicia established enduring shell terraces (“concheiros”), exploiting limpets, mussels, seabirds, and anadromous salmonids in the Miño–Eo and Cantabrian inlets; along the Lower Tagus and Sado, late-period proto-middens presaged the great Mesolithic mounds.
• Uplands & river corridors: Mixed hunting (red deer, wild boar, aurochs) and nut-mast gathering along the Douro and Mondego; seasonal camps on dunes and river terraces facilitated horse/reindeer legacies early, giving way to forest game and intensified fishing as the Holocene advanced.
Technology & Material Culture
Across both arcs, foragers refined a common toolkit to exploit water–edge abundance:
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Microlithic industries of backed bladelets and trapezes for composite projectiles; bone harpoons, gorges, and needles; nets and basketry for mass capture.
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Ground-stone adzes and querns appear late for wood-working and nut/seed processing.
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Dugout canoes (and lighter rafts) enabled short-hop navigation of lagoons, rias, and rivers.
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Ornaments—shell pendants, animal teeth, painted pebbles, incised bone—circulated along coasts and up river corridors; ochre remained central to body marking and mortuary rites.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
Waterways and passes provided the region’s connective tissue:
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Rhône–Saône–southern Jura linked the Mediterranean arc to the Danubian world;
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Ebro corridor bridged the Atlantic and Mediterranean façades across the Pyrenees, while Vardar–Adriatic and Ligurian–Tyrrhenian shores bound Italy to Provence and Sardinia–Corsica–Tuscan stepping-stones;
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Douro/Tagus river lines threaded the Atlantic interior; cabotage along the Gulf of Lion and Iberian–Tyrrhenian coasts redistributed fish, salt, obsidian (e.g., Monte Arci), pigments, and ornaments.
These braided routes furnished redundancy: when a lagoon silted or a fish run failed, adjacent nodes sustained exchange and subsistence.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Water-edge landscapes doubled as archives of ancestry:
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Cave and cliff art persisted (e.g., Levantine scenes in eastern Iberia, late geometric/figurative panels in the western Mediterranean), while midden mounds became memorialized places.
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Burials—often with ochre, shell/teeth beads, and select tools—clustered on levees and dune spurs, marking lineages to particular coves and riverbends.
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Hearth complexes and shrine stones in cove mouths or karst shelters anchored seasonal returns and feasting cycles keyed to tunny runs and eel/salmon passages.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Foragers engineered durability through portfolio subsistence and strategic anchoring:
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Coast–inland alternation (lagoon/estuary ↔ oak upland/karst) spread risk across climate-sensitive niches.
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Storage—smoked fish and meat, dried shellfish, roasted acorns/hazelnuts—cushioned Younger Dryas downturns and seasonal bottlenecks.
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Emerging tenure rules over weirs, shell banks, springs, and groves regulated access and mitigated conflict, keeping commons productive.
Long-Term Significance
By 6,094 BCE, Southwest Europe had matured into a densely networked Epipaleolithic heartland: lagoon-ringed villages and river hamlets along the Mediterranean, conchero-rich rias and estuarine camps on the Atlantic—each linked by river and sea.
This balanced forest–river–sea economy, grounded in storage, mobility, and ritual tenure, formed the resilient substrate onto which incoming Neolithic farming packages would graft in the next millennia, without effacing the region’s deep coastal and riparian genius loci.