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Article Dans Une Revue Quaternary International Année : 2009

Bronze Age at Lake Bourget (NW Alps, France): vegetation, human impact and climate change

Résumé

Pollen analyses of three sediment cores performed on the archaeological lake dwellings of Chindrieux and Tresserve (Savoie, France), on the eastern shore of Lake Bourget, enable the reconstruction of vegetation history and human impact during the Bronze Age. Results show a good correlation between lake-level fluctuations and the evolution of anthropogenic indicators. The end of the Neolithic period and the early Bronze Age are characterised by a discreet occupation of the Lake Bourget surroundings, in spite of a warmer climatic condition. The middle Bronze Age, contemporaneous with wetter and cooler conditions, is related to a decrease in pollen of cultivated plants and weed. Farming activities reappear in the late Bronze Age and human impact increases suddenly at the very end of the late Bronze Age. Three anthropogenic phases are clearly visible: a short decrease in anthropogenic indicators and a high lake-level phase occur in the middle of this period of intense farming development. A new decrease in human impact appears at the beginning of the Iron Age.

Dates et versions

hal-00399518 , version 1 (26-06-2009)

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Citer

Emilie Gauthier, Hervé Richard. Bronze Age at Lake Bourget (NW Alps, France): vegetation, human impact and climate change. Quaternary International, 2009, 200 (1-2), pp.111-119. ⟨10.1016/j.quaint.2008.10.004⟩. ⟨hal-00399518⟩
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