New data on the chronology of the Vale do Forno sedimentary sequence (Lower Tejo River terrace staircase) and its relevance as a fluvial archive of the Middle Pleistocene in western Iberia
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Abstract
The Vale do Forno archaeological sites (Alpiarça, central Portugal) document the earliest human occupation
in the Lower Tejo River, well established in geomorphological and environmental terms, within
the Middle Pleistocene. In a staircase of six fluvial terraces, the Palaeolithic sites were found on the T4
terrace (þ24 m, above river bed) which is made of a basal Lower Gravels unit (LG) and an overlying Upper
Sands unit (US). Geomorphological mapping, coupled with lithostratigraphy, sedimentology and luminescence
dating (quartz-OSL and K-feldspar post-IRIR290) were used in this study. The oldest artefacts
found in the LG unit show crude bifacial forms that can be attributed to the Acheulian. In contrast, the US
unit has archaeological sites stratigraphically documenting successive phases of an evolved Acheulian.
Luminescence dating and correlation with the Marine Isotopic Stages suggest that the LG unit has a
probable age of ca. 335 to 325 ka and the US unit an age of ca. 325 to 155 ka. This is in contrast to
previous interpretations ascribing this terrace (and lithic industries) to the Last Interglacial and early
phases of the Last Glacial. The VF3 site (Milhar os), containing Micoquian (Final Acheulian) industries
(with fine and elaborated bifaces), found in a stratigraphic level located between the T4 terrace deposits
and a colluvium associated with Late Pleistocene aeolian sands, is younger than 155 ka but much older
than 32 ka.
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Cunha, P.P., et al., New data on the chronology of the Vale do Forno sedimentary sequence (Lower Tejo River
terrace staircase) and its relevance as a fluvial archive of the Middle Pleistocene in western Iberia, Quaternary Science Reviews (2016), http://
dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.11.001