Atlantic West Europe (49,293 – 28,578 BCE):…
49293 BCE to 28578 BCE
Atlantic West Europe (49,293 – 28,578 BCE): Shelves, Estuaries, and Loess–Karst Hinterlands
Geographic and Environmental Context
-
Sea level ~60–90 m lower exposed wide continental shelves, pushing the coastline far seaward. The Loire and Gironde valleys extended across broad estuarine plains; dune fields and tidal flats were extensive along the Bay of Biscay.
-
Inland, loessy lowlands, karst belts (Charente, Périgord fringe), and river-terrace staircases created dense mosaics of shelter-rich uplands and productive floodplains.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
-
Alternating Dansgaard–Oeschger interstadials and Heinrich cold/dry pulses drove rapid shifts.
-
Interstadials: milder, slightly wetter; patchy oak–pine–hazel woodland crept into sheltered valleys; rivers ran fuller; wetlands expanded.
-
Stadials: colder, drier; steppe–tundra dominated open country; heightened loess deposition and stronger winds along the shelf edge; shorter growing seasons.
-
Overall trajectory into early MIS 2: longer winters, more continental seasonality despite Atlantic moderation.
Subsistence and Settlement
-
Estuary–coast foraging: shellfish, flatfish, eel and salmon/shad runs, waterfowl in marshes; strandings and nearshore pursuits of seals and small cetaceans in some seasons.
-
Open-country hunting: horse, reindeer, bison, red deer on terrace edges and windward plateaus; ambushes at river crossings and dune lee-sides.
-
Karst and rockshelter use: warm-phase base camps in limestone belts for longer stays; cold pulses saw smaller, mobile hunting stations on exposed vantage spurs.
-
Plant foods—nuts, roots, and wetland seeds—rose in importance during interstadials, especially in backswamps and levee margins.
Technology and Material Culture
-
Upper Paleolithic blade/bladelet industries with burins, endscrapers, backed points, and toward the close of MIS 3, increasing microblade elements for composite projectiles.
-
High-quality flint from Chalk/Loire sources circulated widely; river gravels supplied good cobbles.
-
Bone/antler barbed points, leisters, needles; hide-working kits indicate tailored cold-weather clothing.
-
Ochre and ornaments (perforated shells, teeth) show durable symbolic traditions.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
-
The Loire–Vienne–Dordogne/Garonne systems formed north–south and east–west arteries, tying the Biscay rim to interior uplands and to West Central Europe.
-
Shelf-edge plains during low sea stands enabled long coastal transits between Brittany and Aquitaine without committing to deep-water travel.
-
Stylistic/lithic parallels point to exchanges with Atlantic Southwest Europe to the south and West Central Europe to the east.
Cultural and Symbolic Expressions
-
Repeated occupation of rockshelters and caves along limestone belts yielded hearth complexes, knapping floors, and ornament manufacture—probable aggregation locales in interstadials.
-
Portable art (engraved plaquettes, decorated bone) and persistent pigment use suggest strong group signaling and shared ritual practices across river basins.
Environmental Adaptation and Resilience
-
Coast–river–upland triad: flexible rotation among estuaries, terrace grasslands, and karst refugia buffered short, sharp climate reversals.
-
Risk-spreading diets blended big-game hunting with reliable aquatic resources (fish, eels, waterfowl) and storable plant foods (nuts).
-
Knowledge of migratory calendars (salmon/eel runs, reindeer routes) and storm/wind regimes on the shelf underwrote planning.
Toward the Last Glacial Maximum
By 28578 BCE, Atlantic West European foragers had honed a shelf–estuary–karst adaptive package: mobile, seasonally scheduled, and socially networked across major river corridors. These strategies positioned them to persist as climates tightened into the full severity of the LGM.