El Mirador Cave
Basic information
Sample name: El Mirador Cave

Reference: P. Martín, P. Saladié, J. Nadal, and J. M. Vergès. 2014. Butchered and consumed: Small carnivores from the Holocene levels of El Mirador Cave (Sierra de Atapuerca, Burgos, Spain). Quaternary International 353:153-169 [ER 3234]
Geography
Country: Spain

State: Burgos



Coordinate: 42.341606° N, -3.507174° W
Coordinate basis: estimated from map

Time interval: Holocene

Max Ma: 0.00721

Min Ma: 0.00685

Age basis: radiocarbon (calibrated)

Geography comments: "The 6 m Holocene sedimentary layers rest directly on top of MIR51/. Four meters are attributed to Neolithic occupations (levels MIR24 to MIR6) occurring between the last third of the 6th millennium and the first half of the 4th cal BC (Vergès et al., 2008), while the remaining 2 m are from the Middle Bronze Age (MIR4 and MIR3A), between the 2nd and 4th quarter of the 2nd millennium cal BC (Vergès et al., 2002) (Table 1)."

Environment
Lithology: siltstone

Taphonomic context: human accumulation

Archaeology: burials,ceramics,stone tools,other artifacts

Habitat comments: This paper mainly focuses on the Holocene succession, which has a maximum height of ~5 m (MIR24-MIR3A)(Vergès et al., 2008; Angelucci et al., 2009). A set of 18 radio-carbon dates reveals that the cave was occupied between the Early Neolithic and the Bronze Age. The Holocene sediments from this trench are composed of“burnt stabling layers” or “fumiers” produced by the periodical combustion of domestic livestock dung (Vergès et al., 2002, 2008; Angelucciet al., 2009)

Methods
Life forms: carnivores,ungulates,other small mammals

Sampling methods: quarry

Sample size: 227 specimens

Sampled by: Vergès

Years: 1999 - 2008

Metadata
Sample number: 3563

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2019-10-10 14:39:00

Modified: 2019-10-10 03:45:26

Abundance distribution
10 species
2 singletons
total count 227
geometric series index: 14.6
Fisher's α: 2.140
geometric series k: 0.5702
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.5015
Shannon's H: 1.1882
Good's u: 0.9912
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
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