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Dating Menga

We publish a new article titled “A multimethod approach to the genesis of Menga, a World Heritage megalith“. The scientific study of Neolithic monuments holds fundamental keys to the analysis of early social complexity. This is often impeded by the challenges involved in understanding their temporality and, particularly, their initial construction dates. This problem is most severe in monuments that were not predominantly used for burial and went on to have long biographies in which activity in later periods obliterated the material record of the earliest phases. That was certainly the case of the Menga dolmen, part of the Antequera World Heritage site (Málaga, Spain), and one of the most remarkable megaliths in Europe, for which, after nearly 200 years of explorations and research, no firm chronology existed. The research presented in this paper shows how this problem was tackled through a multimethod, scientific, and geoarchaeological approach. The analysis of 29 fresh numerical ages, including radiocarbon determinations as well as optically stimulated luminescence, thermoluminescence, and uranium-thorium dates, led to the successful establishment of Menga’s construction date and the subsequent contextualization of the monument within the social and cultural background it arose in. Placing the dolmen in the context of its time of “birth” introduces entirely new possibilities for its interpretation, both in terms of local and supralocal social and cultural processes.

Últimas noticias

  • WESIPS Conference

    Foto grupo WESIPS_

    Raquel Montero Artús, member of the ATLAS research group, have presented the conference “A Social Perspective on Cinnabar Use and Mercury Exposure at the Copper Age Megasite of Valencina, Spain ”  during  the WESIPS Conference, 2024 (Warfare, Environment, Social Inequality, and Pro-Sociability Biennial) in Sevilla, Spain  

  • Spain’s Copper Age Priestesses. An Archaeology Magazine Slideshow

    archaeology

    Archaeology, the magazine of the Archaeological Institute of America (USA), re-launches its website with a new slideshow of our recent discoveries at the Valencina Copper Age mega-site. https://archaeology.org/issues/may-june-2024/#spain-copper-age-priestesses

  • LiDAR para revolucionar la Arqueología

    Captura de Pantalla 2024-06-17 a las 10.39.07

    El Grupo de Investigación ATLAS, de la Universidad de Sevilla, ha desarrollado diversos estudios de la Prehistoria Reciente con la tecnología LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) y materiales del Instituto Geográfico Nacional. El programa de televisión y de divulgación TESIS presentó algunos avances en su nueva edición. https://www.canalsur.es/television/programas/tesis/noticia/2055078.html