West Europe (28,577 – 7,822 BCE): Early…
28577 BCE to 7822 BCE
West Europe (28,577 – 7,822 BCE): Early Holocene on the Atlantic–Mediterranean Rim — Deglaciation, Azilian Turns, and Water-Rich Refugia
Geographic & Environmental Context
West Europe in the terminal Pleistocene and earliest Holocene comprised two interlocking littoral–riverine spheres that shared headwaters and passes but looked out on different seas:
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Mediterranean West Europe (southern France from Roussillon–Languedoc–Provence up to Lyon and the southern Jura, plus Monaco and Corsica): retreating glaciers and a rapidly rising Gulf of Lion drowned outer shelves and splayed the Rhône–Camargue into shifting deltas; along Languedoc–Provence, new lagoons and marshes formed behind sand barriers; southern Jura cols and the Rhône corridor became prime north–south thoroughfares; Corsica remained insular yet nearer the mainland.
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Atlantic West Europe (the Atlantic and Channel façades of France—from the Loire and Burgundy north to the Low Countries—and the Galician–Cantabrian coast): lowered sea levels exposed broad continental shelves and subaerial river valleys that the early Holocene then flooded into the rias of Galicia and the estuaries of Brittany, the Loire, Gironde and Seine. Temperate woodlands recolonized lowlands as the Bay of Biscay coastline rolled landward.
Together these belts formed a single hydrological engine—ridge → valley → lagoon/estuary—that would structure human movement, diet, and ritual as climates oscillated.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
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Bølling–Allerød (c. 14,700–12,900 BCE): Rapid warming and moisture return drove oak–hazel resurgence in Mediterranean valleys and on Atlantic slopes; river discharges rose; newly cut inshore basins teemed with life.
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Younger Dryas (c. 12,900–11,700 BCE): A sharp cool–dry relapse lowered snowlines on the Pyrenees and Massif Central, reopened steppe–tundra mosaics, and nudged foragers toward deltaic/estuarine refugia and sheltered valleys.
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Early Holocene (post-11,700 BCE to 7,822 BCE): Climatic stability—warmer, predictably wet—fostered rapid forest expansion, maturing lagoons and rias, and reliable seasonal cycles of fish runs, waterfowl migrations, and nut mast.
Subsistence & Settlement
Populations navigated a long, region-wide shift from late Magdalenian big-game specialization to Azilian and early Mesolithic broad-spectrum lifeways:
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Coasts & lagoons (Med.): Year-round use of mullet, eel, grey mullet, shellfish, waterfowl, and occasional small cetaceans in the Camargue, Étang de Vaccarès, Languedoc ponds, and Provençal coves; growing semi-sedentary camps at river mouths and lagoon margins.
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Estuaries & rias (Atlantic): Exploitation of salmon, shad, eel, lamprey, shellfish, and seabirds in the Loire, Gironde, Adour, and Galician rias, paired with seasonal inland rounds for red deer, boar, aurochs in forested uplands.
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Inland valleys & uplands: Continued hunting of red deer, ibex, chamois, and riparian foraging (nuts, berries, wetland plants) in the Rhône–Isère, Ain–Saône, Garonne, and southern Jura footholds; rock-shelter occupations in Provence and Roussillon persist as logistical hubs.
Recurrent re-use of favored terraces, lake/lagoon margins, and caves built up hearth complexes and middens—an incipient village tempo without permanent architecture.
Technology & Material Culture
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Lithics: Transition from large Magdalenian blades/burins to microlithic bladelets and geometric backed points, optimised for bow-and-arrow hunting in closing forests.
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Aquatic gear: Bone/antler harpoons, gaffs, gorges, stake-weirs, basketry and cordage-weighted nets; emergence of early dugout and light rafts on lakes and estuaries.
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Plant processing: Grinding slabs and mortars appear more often in early Holocene contexts, signalling intensified nut and seed use.
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Art & ornaments: Azilian painted pebbles, incised bone/antler, shell and tooth pendants; lingering Franco-Cantabrian cave traditions in the Atlantic zone give way to open-air and portable symbolism.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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The Rhône–Saône–Bresse / southern Jura chain remained the principal north–south conduit, linking West Europe to Central Europe’s loess plains and Alpine forelands.
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Brenner/Reschen–Inn, Great St. Bernard–Valais–Rhône, and St. Gotthard passes intermittently reopened, feeding exotics (flints, ophites, colourants) onto the Swiss Plateau and down to the Rhône.
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Pyrenean saddles connected Roussillon–Languedoc with Catalonia; coastal cabotage along the Gulf of Lion tied Provence to Liguria; the Loire–Gironde–Seine and Brittany capes linked Atlantic river worlds.
These routes offered redundant access to wetlands, mast, and stone, cushioning communities against climatic lurches.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Waterfront and woodland became theaters of meaning:
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Cemeteries with ochred burials appear on dunes and terraces, fixing lineages to resource nodes.
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Lakeside and lagoon-edge deposits, painted pebbles, and decorated implements mark ritualized feasting and first-catch/first-fish observances.
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A palpable Azilian turn from cavernous tableaux to small-format signs—pebbles, plaquettes, cairns by fords and coves—maps a sacred geography of movement and return.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Foragers met instability with portfolio strategies and place-based memory:
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Coastal–inland alternation (winter estuary fisheries ↔ summer upland hunts) smoothed interannual variability.
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Storage (smoked/dried fish and meat, rendered fats, roasted acorn/hazel) bridged lean seasons and Younger Dryas setbacks.
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Edge-habitat focus—riparian woods, back-barrier marshes, piedmont ecotones—maximised predictable yields as big-game ranges shrank and forests advanced.
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Early watercraft and pass-wise mobility preserved access to still-productive niches when local patches faltered.
Long-Term Significance
By 7,822 BCE, West Europe had become a densely used, water-anchored refugium where Azilian and early Mesolithic communities flourished. The shared operating code—forest mast + estuary/lagoon fish, flexible mobility, storage, and ritual tenure at the water’s edge—forged a durable platform for the coming Neolithic contacts funnelling up the Po–Rhône–Saône and Seine/Loire–Rhine axes. In this liminal age between ice and agriculture, rivers and semi-enclosed seas were both pantry and pathway, and the memory of water shaped society itself.