Project Details
Iron Age landscapes on th estraits of Gibraltar: the territories of La Silla de Papa and Los Castillejos de Alcorrín (ninth to the first century BC)
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Dirce Marzoli
Subject Area
Prehistory and World Archaeology
Term
from 2014 to 2018
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 246446889
This project has as its starting point the excavations carried out by a Franco-Spanish team and by a German-Spanish team on the two largest Iron Age settlements of the north side of the Strait of Gibraltar, separated by a distance of 40 km: La Silla del Papa in Tarifa (Cadiz) and Los Castillejos de Alcorrín in Manilva (Malaga). These two hill forts, established at the time of the first Phoenician colonial settlements in the West, controlled a coastal area while being set back from the coast themselves. They both give rise to the same questions about the structuring of territories in a highly compartmentalised area, about the tension between a maritime tradition and defensive concerns, about the complementarity between the exploitation of fishing resources and agro-pastoral uses of the land. Lastly, they both harboured hybrid communities, with a mixture of Phoenician and indigenous components.The aim is to jointly examine the spatial analysis of these sites in their environment in greater depth: precise demarcation of the habitat, identification of territorial markers (towers, funeral monuments), location of cemeteries, location of quarries, paleoenvironmental reconstruction, demonstration of links with a port site, assessment of agro-pastoral resources, estimation of the size of the terrain required. In other words, it involves going beyond the archaeological site to understand the way in which it is integrated into a specific area, taking into account, on the one hand, the constraints of the natural environment, and on the other hand the strategies developed by its inhabitants in terms, particularly, of cultural factors relating to their origins.This work will be carried out using an approach involving geoarchaeology and spatial archaeology, on various scales, based on the most advanced methods: acquisition of space data by onboard sensors on drones, complemented by subsurface information obtained using geophysical methods as well as drilling sequences. The project will rest on acquired knowledge in order to develop innovative technologies. Thus, for the topographical component, the selected sites will serve as a test area for the use of a thermal camera and a miniaturised LIDAR carried by a drone; and for the geoarchaeological component, in order to consolidate the dating performed by 14C or to complement the latter in sedimentary layers lacking in organic matter, the technique of OSL dating (carried out by the Cologne Luminescence Lab) will be employed.The same study protocols will be applied to the two study areas. The pooling of technical means and methodologies developed by the two partners in truly integrated collaboration will be the watchword of this project, which is based on many years of experience of joint projects between the two coordinators. This synergy is a guarantee for the success of a ground breaking project, unprecedented in southern Spain, that could not have been initiated independently by any of the two partners.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
France
Participating Person
Dr. Pierre Moret