Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T13:00:50.593Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Update and synthesis of the available archaeological and geochronological data for the Lower Paleolithic site of Loreto at Venosa (Basilicata, Italy)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2024

Alison Pereira*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire GEOPS, UMR 8148, Université Paris-Saclay, bâtiment 504, 1 rue du Belvédère, 91400, Orsay, France
Marie-Hélène Moncel
Affiliation:
Histoire Naturelle de l'Homme préhistorique (HNHP),UMR 7194 MNHN-CNRS-UPVD, Département de Préhistoire du Muséum national d'Histoire Naturelle,1 rue René Panhard, 75013 Paris, France
Sébastien Nomade
Affiliation:
LSCE, UMR 8212, CEA, CNRS et Université de Versailles St-Quentin, Avenue de la Terrasse, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France
Pierre Voinchet
Affiliation:
Histoire Naturelle de l'Homme préhistorique (HNHP),UMR 7194 MNHN-CNRS-UPVD, Département de Préhistoire du Muséum national d'Histoire Naturelle,1 rue René Panhard, 75013 Paris, France
Qingfeng Shao
Affiliation:
College of Geographical Science, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023, China
Christophe Falguères
Affiliation:
Histoire Naturelle de l'Homme préhistorique (HNHP),UMR 7194 MNHN-CNRS-UPVD, Département de Préhistoire du Muséum national d'Histoire Naturelle,1 rue René Panhard, 75013 Paris, France
David Lefèvre
Affiliation:
Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier, CNRS, UMR 5140 “Archéologie des sociétés méditerranéennes”, and LabEx ARCHIMEDE – ANR-11-LABX-0032-01-, Campus Saint Charles, 34032 Montpellier Cedex, France
Jean Paul Raynal
Affiliation:
Université de Bordeaux, CNRS, UMR5199 PACEA, Bâtiment B2, Allée Geoffroy St Hilaire 33615 PESSAC Cedex, France
Vincent Scao
Affiliation:
LSCE, UMR 8212, CEA, CNRS et Université de Versailles St-Quentin, Avenue de la Terrasse, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France
Marcello Piperno
Affiliation:
Università di Roma “La Sapienza”, Dipartimento Scienze Storiche, Archeologiche e Antropologiche dell'Antichità, Sezione di Paletnologia, Piazzale A. Moro, Roma, Italy
Suzanne Simone
Affiliation:
Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique, 56bis bd du Jardin exotique, 98 000 Monaco
Jean Jacques Bahain
Affiliation:
Histoire Naturelle de l'Homme préhistorique (HNHP),UMR 7194 MNHN-CNRS-UPVD, Département de Préhistoire du Muséum national d'Histoire Naturelle,1 rue René Panhard, 75013 Paris, France
*
Corresponding author: Alison Pereira; Email: alison.pereira@universite-paris-saclay.fr
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In the Basilicata region, located in southern Italy and known for hosting among the first occurrences of the Acheulean culture in southwestern Europe, the Lower Paleolithic site of Loreto at Venosa is located less than a kilometer from the emblematic site of Notarchirico and less than 25 km from Cimitero di Atella. The Loreto site has not been studied as thoroughly as the two other sites and, although geological investigations have been carried out in the Venosa basin, no direct numerical dating has ever been published for the three archaeological levels brought to light during the excavation campaigns. We present a multi-method geochronological approach combining ESR/U-series, ESR, and 40Ar/39Ar permitting to refine the age of the most ancient archaeological level (A) of the Loreto site. These data allow us to propose an MIS 13 age for this level, in accordance with previous hypotheses based on geological and paleontological data. We also propose a technical review of the lithic tools preserved in the collection of the National Archaeological Museum of Venosa to integrate Loreto in the evolution scheme of the European Acheulean techno-complex emergence and diffusion.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Quaternary Research Center

INTRODUCTION

Discovered at the beginning of the twentieth century, the Lower Paleolithic archaeological site of Loreto is located within the Venosa basin (Basilicata) in the southern part of the Italian Peninsula, only several meters from the famous Acheulean site of Notarchirico. Both sites are located less than 15 km NE of the Mount Vulture volcanic complex (see Fig. 1).

Figure 1. Satellite image from of the study area (Google Earth software). The archaeological sites of Venosa Loreto, Notarchirico, and Cimitero di Atella (white stars), as well as the towns and lakes (white dots) that gave their names to the main volcanic synthems of the Mount Vulture area are located.

The first archaeological excavation area was opened at Loreto during a short period in 1932 (Rellini, Reference Rellini1932). Additional systematic excavations were led in the middle part of the last century (Blanc, Reference Blanc1953; Chiappella, Reference Chiappella1964; Bonifay Reference Bonifay1977; Barral et al., Reference Barral, Heinichen-Chiappella and Simone1978; Baissas, Reference Baissas1980; Alberdi et al., Reference Alberdi, Caloi and Palombo1988). The more important excavation campaigns, directed by A.C. Blanc and G. Chiapella from the Istituto Italiano di Paleontologia Umana, occurred between 1956 and 1961. A few years later, between 1974 and 1981, the site was reopened on a surface of 20 m2 under the archeological direction of L. Barral and S. Simone (Musée d'Anthropologie Préhistorique, Monaco; Crovetto, Reference Crovetto1993). The various campaigns therefore cover more than 50 years and resulted in the unearthing of three distinct human occupation levels, labeled from the lowest to highest A, B, and C. The archaeological assemblages of the higher levels, B and C, are constituted by evolved Acheulean industries, but, due to the lack of well-preserved outcrops, these two levels unfortunately have been under-studied. The most ancient archaeological level (A), which constitutes the only level securely attributed to the Lower Paleolithic culture, was discovered in 1956 by G. Chiapella and repeatedly excavated (see supplementary material 1 for historical photos of the previous excavation campaigns).

A few centimeters above this level, rare faunal remains and lithics industries were found and described that are similar to those from level A. However, due to the small assemblage, no specific study has been described for this horizon.

The nearby site of Notarchirico, which was discovered later in 1979 and excavated over more than 30 years by M. Piperno's team (Università di Roma “La Sapienza”), allowed the individualization of 11 archaeological horizons and the discovery of a human femur (Piperno et al., Reference Piperno, Lefèvre, Raynal, Tagliacozzo and Piperno1999). Geochronology of the site was previously based on TL dating (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Pilleyre and Vernet1993, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Pilleyre, Reference Pilleyre, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier, Montret and Piperno1999; Raynal et al., Reference Raynal, Lefèvre, Vernet and Piperno1999), more recently clarified by 40Ar/39Ar and ESR dating, to place the most part of the human occupation levels as coeval of the MIS 16 glacial (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Garon, Lefèvre, Raynal, Scao and Piperno2015). Recently, new excavation campaigns, led from 2018 by M.H. Moncel's team (HNHP, CNRS–MNHN) and starting downward from the lowest archeosurface, resulted in pushing back the emergence of the Acheulean culture in southern Italy to about 700 ka ago (i.e., during a phase contemporaneous with the MIS 17 interglacial; Moncel et al., Reference Moncel, Santagata, Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain and Daujeard2020, Reference Moncel, Ashton, Arzarello, Fontana, Lamotte, Scott and Muttillo2021). These recent discoveries make this site the oldest Paleolithic site in Italy and one of the oldest in Western Europe associated with typical Acheulean technologies. It also attests that the oldest human remains of the Italian Peninsula currently are well dated.

While the chronology of Notarchirico is now well known, the site of Loreto lacks independent age control and was tentatively attributed to MIS 13 based on geological correlations with the volcanic activity of Mount Vulture (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). However, no direct radiometric age for the sequence has been obtained to date. This article aims to reappraise the geochronological and archaeological contexts of archaeological level A of Loreto in order to make this record part of the discussions focused on the emergence and development of the Acheulean culture(s) in Western Europe. To achieve this goal, we provide a technical review of the lithic tools preserved in the collection of the National Archaeological Museum of Venosa. Regarding the geochronology, we provide new independent ages using several methods commonly employed to date middle Pleistocene archaeological records in Europe and especially in Italy: electron spin resonance (ESR) on bleached quartz, ESR combined with U-series (ESR/U-series) dating on fossil teeth, and 40Ar/39Ar on single crystals (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Shao, Bahain, Arzarello, Douville and Falguères2016, Reference Pereira, Nomade, Falguères, Bahain, Tombret, Garcia, Voinchet, Bulgarelli and Anzidei2017; Voinchet et al., Reference Voinchet, Pereira, Nomade, Falguères, Biddittu, Piperno, Moncel and Bahain2020; Bahain et al., Reference Bahain, Voinchet, Vietti, Shao, Tombret, Pereira, Nomade and Falguères2021). The ESR/U-series method was used to date horse teeth from level A (sample from the Venosa Museum's collection) while 40Ar/39Ar and ESR were used on bleached quartz to date the same level and a younger geological stratum, altimetrically close to Level C, thus allowing us to obtain an age for the site by a stratigraphic framing. While the ESR and ESR/U-series methods provided a direct deposition age for the studied level, the 40Ar/39Ar method on single crystals from fluvial deposits (reworked volcanic minerals) is restricted to highlighting the various eruptive events recorded during infilling of the Venosa basin (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Garon, Lefèvre, Raynal, Scao and Piperno2015).

Geological context of the site

From a geological point of view, the Venosa tectonic basin constitutes a depression progressively filled by fluvial and lacustrine sediments during the middle Pleistocene. Both stratigraphies at Loreto and Notarchirico are characterized by the overwhelming presence of volcanic material (primary as well as reworked deposits), mainly derived from the Mount Vulture stratovolcano, which was very active during the middle Pleistocene (Cortini, Reference Cortini1975; Bonadonna et al., Reference Bonadonna, Brocchini, Laurenzi, Principe, Ferrara, Follieri, Girotti, Kotasakis, Taddeucci and Turner1993; Giannandrea et al., Reference Giannandrea, La Volpe, Principe and Schiattarella2004; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009). The chronological and spatial relations between Loreto and Notarchirico remained uncertain for a long time, with Loreto being considered older than Notarchirico on the basis of the earliest archaeological assessments (Rellini, Reference Rellini1932). New research based on paleontological and geological data suggested the change in the Notarchirico deposits (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Raynal et al., Reference Raynal, Lefevre, Vernet, Pilleyre, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1998).

Mount Vulture volcanic complex

The Italian geology, particularly in the central and southern part of the country, is characterized from the early middle Pleistocene by intense tectonic and volcanic activity. This activity not only created small tectonic basins that are particularly suitable to the preservation of sub-continuous fluvio-lacustrine infilling, but also induced the occurrence of almost continuous deposition of potassic volcanic minerals within these records (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). These tectonic basins have contributed to the excellent preservation of both archaeological and paleontological middle Pleistocene sequences, which sometimes cover continuously long timescales (such as one or two glacial/interglacial cycles). Such records can be dated using the 40Ar/39Ar radio-isotopic technique (e.g., V. Villa et al., Reference Villa, Soriano, Grün, Marra, Nomade, Pereira, Boschian, Pollarolo, Fang and Bahain2016; Marra et al., Reference Marra, Nomade, Pereira, Petronio, Salari, Sottili and Bahain2018; Moncel et al., Reference Moncel, Santagata, Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain and Daujeard2020).

In Basilicata, the main volcanic source that was very active during the middle Pleistocene was the Mount Vulture composite volcano. This volcano culminates at 1327 m asl and is the only volcanic edifice located on the eastern belt of the southern Apennines. Very active between about 800 ka and 100 ka, the origin of this volcano is not fully understood but is clearly spatially associated to a NE–SW trending lithospheric discontinuity during subduction of the Adriatic plate (Doglioni et al., Reference Doglioni, Mongelli and Pieri1994; Giannandrea et al., Reference Giannandrea, La Volpe, Principe and Schiattarella2004; Schiattarella et al., Reference Schiattarella, Beneduce, Di Leo, Giano, Giannandrea and Principe2005; D'Orazio et al., Reference D'Orazio, Innocenti, Tonarini and Doglioni2007). While usually integrated within the Campanian magmatic province, this volcanic edifice is significantly different from the other Italian complexes. Indeed, in addition to the specific geographic position of Mount Vulture, its eruptive products, enriched in sodium and potassium, demonstrate compositions that are distinct from the peri-tyrrhenian Pleistocene volcanoes in central and southern Italy (Peccerillo, Reference Peccerillo2005). While this complex was mainly characterized by explosive activity, lava flow events also are documented (Brocchini et al., Reference Brocchini, La Volpe, Laurenzi and Principe1994; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009).

In the early 2000s, a new geological map of the Mount Vulture area was published (Giannandrea et al., Reference Giannandrea, La Volpe, Principe and Schiattarella2004; Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006) and an updated stratigraphic subdivision of the Mount Vulture products was proposed. This classification divides the deposits into units named UBSU (unconformity bounded stratigraphic units), which allowed the linkage of volcanism and local tectonic activity (Giannandrea et al, Reference Giannandrea, La Volpe, Principe and Schiattarella2004). Subsequently, these units have been observed within the surrounding fluvio-lacustrine sequences of the Atella, Melfi, and Venosa basins. These UBSU are divided in two supersynthems, containing synthems, which themselves are divided into subsynthems. All these subdivisions are bounded by unconformities (Giannandrea et al., Reference Giannandrea, La Volpe, Principe and Schiattarella2004; Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006). The two supersynthems, which are named Monte Vulture and Monticchio, are stratigraphically separated by a paleosol identified as a geological marker labeled M18. The various synthems and subsynthems identified as well as their chronological boundaries (La Volpe and Principe, Reference La Volpe and Principe1994; Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006) are presented in Table 1. The geochronological constraints presented in this table synthetize the published 40Ar/39Ar data (Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009), all recalculated according Renne et al. (Reference Renne, Balco, Ludwig, Mundil and Min2011) using the K total decay constant and the optimization calibration of the monitor flux standard ACs-2 proposed by Niespolo et al. in Reference Niespolo, Rutte, Deino and Renne2017 (i.e., 1.1891 Ma). Dates reported are very imprecise and should only be considered as approximate ages of the various eruptive units.

Table 1. Synthesis showing the various volcanic and sedimentary subsynthems of the Mount Vulture Volcano (modified from Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006). The Venosa basin formations are correlated by tephrostratigraphy to the Monte Vulture units (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, 2010).

Venosa basin and Loreto archaeological site

The Venosa basin is a large structural depression filled by lacustrine–fluvial deposits. It is oriented NW–SE and extends on more than 50 km from the Apennines chain (Apennino Lucano relief) and Mount Vulture volcano in the west to the Murge plateau in the east (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Pilleyre, Piperno, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1994, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999). Geological investigations in the basin that were led at the end of the 1990s described and correlated the sediment infill using tephrostratigraphy to the volcanic activity of Mount Vulture (see Table 1) (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Pilleyre, Piperno, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1994, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Raynal et al., Reference Raynal, Lefevre, Vernet, Pilleyre, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1998).

The sedimentary infilling of the Venosa basin is divided in three lithostratigraphic units (“Formations”) that were defined in the central part of the basin by the study of various outcrops and quarries (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Pilleyre, Piperno, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1994, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Raynal et al., Reference Raynal, Lefevre, Vernet, Pilleyre, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1998). Two nested volcano–sedimentary formations, named “Piano Regio Formation” (PRF) and “Tufarelle Formation” (TF) rest on conglomeratic fluvial deposits named “Fonte del Comune Formation” (FCF) (Lefèvre et al.,Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010) (Fig. 2a). Their volcano–sedimentary facies, very rich in pyroclastic materials, have allowed correlation with the Mount Vulture eruptive units (Table 1; La Volpe and Principe, Reference La Volpe and Principe1994; Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006; Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Vernet et al., Reference Vernet, Raynal, Lefèvre, Kieffer and Piperno1999). The Fonte del Comune Formation is contemporaneous with the first phases of regional activity and have been correlated with the Spinoritola subsynthem at the base of Foggianello synthem. The Piano Regio Formation, composed of pumice-rich pyroclastic flows, plinian pumiceous fallouts, and phreato-magmatic deposits, have been correlated with the Fara d'Olivo, Toppo San Paolo, and Rionero subsynthems (see Table. 1). The Notarchirico site belongs to the upper part of the Piano Regio Formation (Raynal et al., Reference Raynal, Lefèvre, Vernet and Piperno1999; Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010)

Figure 2. (a) Schematic cross-section of the Venosa Basin showing the location of Loreto hill and Vn 88-1 drilling. (b) Lithostratigraphy of the Vn 88-1 drilling correlated with the Venosa basin formations (redrawn from Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, 2010); A–D = Tufarelle Formation members; R1 = tephra/volcanic deposit.

The Tufarelle Formation, first described by Piccarreta and Ricchetti (Reference Piccarreta and Ricchetti1970), has been divided in four main lithological units labeled members A, B, C, and D (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). These descriptions were based on natural outcrops and quarries in the central part of the basin, (see Fig. 2a and b). The Tufarelle Formation lies directly on a conglomeratic bank of fluvial deposits of the Fonte del Commune Formation and is nested in the Piano Regio Formation. At the base, member A of the Tufarelle Formation is composed of highly heterometric unsorted conglomerates, coarse-grained sands, and scattered meter-size boulders formed by hyper-concentrated lahar flows. Member B (~10 m thick) is composed of a succession of epiclastites, gray scoria fallout deposits, and horizontal lacustrine limestones. Member C, which is mainly a palustrine environment, as illustrated by the alternance of thick limestones banks, is less epiclastic, containing yellow silts, hydromorphous paleosols, and an encrusted emersion surface. Finally, member D is mainly constituted by greenish-gray clays that are more or less rich in volcanic sands and interspersed with reworked tephra layers and volcanic sands rich in clinopyroxenes. The Tufarelle Formation has been correlated with the San Michele subsynthem and the Melfi synthem (see Table 1).

At the Loreto excavation site (40°58′32.60″N, 15°52′30.33″E), the stratigraphy consists of a 30-m-thick sequence in which 42 distinct sedimentary levels have been identified (Baissas, Reference Baissas1980; Barral and Simone, Reference Barral and Simone1983) (see Fig. 3). A composite sequence of the site has been constructed based on the study of several records from the hill of Loreto, for which the site was named (Baissas, Reference Baissas1980; Barral and Simone, Reference Barral and Simone1983). Indeed, the small outcrops on the slope of the the hill have been compared to a drill core collected in 1988 (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). This core, labeled Vn 88-1, was drilled from the top of the hill to a depth of 40 m (see Fig. 2a and b). Three human-occupation levels, A, B, and C, have been documented (Barral and Simone, 1993). The sedimentary layers corresponding to these levels are indicated on Figure 2b and Figure 3.

Figure 3. Stratigraphic positions of the samples collected at Loreto (modified from Barral and Simone, Reference Barral and Simone1983; Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Pilleyre, Piperno, Sanzelle, Fain, Miallier and Montret1994; and Gagnepain, Reference Gagnepain1996).

Baissas (Reference Baissas1980), thanks to acquisition of palaeomagnetic data along the different outcrops, identified the Brunhes/Matuyama boundary in levels 37–38 (e.g., 775–780 ka). Gagnepain (Reference Gagnepain1996) identified a reverse polarity at around −32 m in core Vn-88-1, which is 5.5 m below level 37 of Baissas, Reference Baissas1980 (−26.5m in the core). The Brunhes/Matuyama boundary must be reinterpreted within the framework of the litho-stratigraphic succession identified in the basin and should correspond to the sedimentary unconformity found in the Loreto core at 31.20 m between the conglomerate of the Fonte del Comune Formation and the lahar deposits of basal member A of the Tufarelle Formation (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). Baissas (Reference Baissas1980) also identified the “Levantine” and “Jamaïca” paleomagnetic excursions in levels 9–8 and 4–2, respectively (around archaeological level C) (see Fig. 3), which provided preliminary chronological information for the top of the sequence. However, the most recent geomagnetic instability scale no longer suggests the existence of these excursions (Singer, Reference Singer2014). Rather, the excursions identified in Loreto could be associated with the excursions at Pringle Falls (ca. 210 ka) and Laguna del Sello (ca. 340 ka) or simply be re-magnetization of the sediments.

The conglomeratic deposits observed at the foot of the hill at Loreto belong to the Fonte del Comune Formation, which is the basal stratigraphic unit of the basin fill (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). Above, there are highly heterometric unsorted conglomerate, coarse-grained sand, and scattered meter-size boulder deposits formed by lahar flows, of member A of the Tufarelle Formation. Higher on the slope, there are epiclastites and gray scoria-fallout deposits. The tephra layer in level 32 corresponds to fallout R1, a major tephrostratigraphic marker of member B of the Tufarelle Formation (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010; Vernet et al., Reference Vernet, Raynal, Lefèvre, Kieffer and Piperno1999) (see stratigraphic position Fig. 2b). Farther uphill, the deposits become less epiclastic and contain thick limestone banks, yellow silts, hydromorphous paleosols, and a cemented and encrusted emersion surface, which are characteristic of palustrine environments of member C of the Tufarelle Formation. The upper facies is composed of gray clayey carbonate banks with carbonate nodules and ferruginous pisolites and reworked tephras that correspond to member D of the Tufarelle Formation.

Archaeological level A belongs to member C. The epiclastites of member C may correlate with the Case Lopes subsynthem of the Mount Vulture volcano (Valle dei Grigi–Fosso del Corbo synthem, base of the Monticchio supersynthem; Table 1) (Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010). The epiclastites were estimated to date between ca. 484 ± 8 ka and 530 ± 22 ka (Brocchini, Reference Brocchini1993; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009).

Archaeology and paleontology of level A

The lithic assemblage constituting archaeosurface A was composed almost entirely of Lower Paleolithic lithic industries made of cores, flakes, choppers, and chopping tools in limestone or flint. It is worth noting that only one tool named “proto-biface” has been found (Barral and Simone, Reference Barral and Simone1983) (see supplementary material 1 – S1 and S2). Technical and typological characteristics of the series have led to their attribution to the historical “Tayacian culture” (Di Cesnola and Mallegni, Reference Di Cesnola, Mallegni and Millon1996; Piperno et al., Reference Piperno, Lefèvre, Raynal and Tagliacozzo1998; Grifoni and Tozzi., Reference Grifoni and Tozzi2006). In addition to the lithic industries, traces of human activities, such as butchery cuts, were identified on large herbivore bones, which bring into question the possible functions of butchers based on this archaeosurface (Barral and Simone, Reference Barral and Simone1983). Before any geological investigations, the chronological context of level A, was established based on paleontological assemblage interpretations. Indeed, Bonifay (Reference Bonifay1977) attributed the large mammal remains found in this layer to the Villafranchian faunal unit, suggesting a possible early middle Pleistocene age for the archaeological vestiges (that we estimate to be ca. MIS 15/16). Furthermore, the abundance of Equus remains and the absence of elephant at Loreto prompted paleontologists at the end of the 1980s to support the older age of the Loreto site compared to the Notarchirico age where the Equus taxa are completely absent.

Over excavation campaigns, the paleontological assemblage became richer with the addition of taxa such as Bos primigenius, Bison schoetensacki, Hippopotamus sp., and Stephanorhinus sp. The faunal assemblage was thus dominated by Palaeoloxodon antiquus, Dicerorhinus etruscus, Equus, Equus aff. E. süssenbornensis, Equus altidens, Equus hydruntinus, Hippopotamus amphibius, Bison schoetensacki, Megaceros soleilhacus, Dama nesti, Dama dama, Capreolus affinis, Capreolus süssenbornensis, Ursus deningeri, Canis arnensis, Canis etruscus, Hyaenidae sp., Felis pardus, Homotherium sp., and Oryctolagus cuniculus (Segre and Piperno, Reference Segre, Piperno and Pigorini1984; Alberdi et al., Reference Alberdi, Caloi and Palombo1988).

These additional paleontological discoveries have resulted in an age interpreted to be older than the Fontana Ranuccio Italian faunal unit, dated to a period contemporaneous with Marine Oxygen Isotopic Stages 13 and 11 (Petronio et al., Reference Petronio, Ceruleo, Marra, Pandolfi, Rolfo, Salari, Sottili and Moro2017; Florindo et al., Reference Florindo, Marra, Angelucci, Biddittu, Bruni, Florindo and Gaeta2021). The Bison species found at Loreto was suggested at the time more archaic than the one recovered at Isernia la Pineta, which recently was dated ca. 582–561 ka (MIS 15; Peretto et al., Reference Peretto, Arnaud, Moggi-Cecchi, Manzi, Nomade, Pereira and Falguères2015). These different interpretations of the Loreto faunal assemblage make any biochronological age hard to assess.

The synthesis of geological and paleontological data led Piperno et al. (Reference Piperno, Lefèvre, Raynal, Tagliacozzo and Piperno1999) in their Notarchirico monograph to propose an age for level A of between ca. 550 and 500 ka, thus during the period that was contemporaneous with the MIS 13 interglacial phase. A complete re-study of the material and additional independent geochronological data were therefore necessary.

SAMPLING AND METHODOLOGY

Geochronology

Figure 3 summarizes all sampling done for geochronological studies directly on the Loreto hill composite stratigraphic sequence. Samples from two stratigraphic levels were collected for 40Ar/39Ar analyses (LOR 2013-01 and LOR 2013-02) ~90 cm below and ~180 cm above archaeological level A (LOR A), respectively. Four horse teeth in the Venosa Museum's collections (VL-A252, VL-A655, VL-A854, VL-911) were sampled from this level for the ESR/U-series dating analyses. Two samples also were collected to be dated by ESR on bleached quartz. One came from the top of the hill, however the deposit selected turned out to be too much reworked to provide a consistent age. The second was collected approximately 6 m above archaeological level LOR A (named LOR 2013-03), so probably close to the upper archaeological level LOR C in elevation (see Fig. 3).

40Ar/39Ar on single grains

The 40Ar/39Ar method was applied to date volcanic minerals found in the Loreto stratigraphic sequence that originated from Mount Vulture eruptive activity. Minerals extracted were individually dated, which allowed us to identify the various volcanic events reworked within the fluvial deposits characterizing Loreto. The 40Ar/39Ar dating was done at the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement facility (LSCE–CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette, France). The samples were prepared following the procedure described in Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Garon, Lefèvre, Raynal, Scao and Piperno2015). After crushing, sieving, cleaning with distilled water, and repeated ultrasonic baths, ~15–20 pristine potassic feldspars, ranging in size between 1 mm and 500 μm, were handpicked. Due to the scarcity of suitable crystals within the samples, all the unaltered crystals found were selected. After a short leaching in a 7% HF acid solution (5 min) in order to remove unwanted potential particles aggregated on the surfaces of the crystals, the samples were then loaded on an aluminum disk and irradiated for 60 minutes (IRR 85) in the ß1 tube of the Osiris reactor (CEA, Saclay, France). After irradiation, about 15 crystals for each sample were loaded individually in a copper sample holder that was then put into a double vacuum Cleartran window. Individual fusions of the K-feldspars were provided using a 25W Synrad CO2 laser at about 10–15% of the nominal power. The extracted gases were then purified for 10 min by two hot GP 110 getters (ZrAl). Argon isotopes (36Ar, 37Ar, 38Ar, 39Ar, 40Ar) were measured using a VG 5400 monocollector mass spectrometer equipped with a Balzers 217 SEV SEN electron multiplier coupled to an ion counter. The full analytical protocol can be found in Nomade et al. (Reference Nomade, Gauthier, Guillou and Pastre2010). Neutron fluence J was calculated using co-irradiated Alder Creek sanidine (ACs-2) standard with an age of 1.194 Ma (JLOR 2013-01 = 0.0003996 ± 0.00000200 and JLOR 2013-02 = 0.0003846 ± 0.00000077) (Nomade et al., Reference Nomade, Renne, Vogel, Deino, Sharp, Becker, Jaouni and Mundil2005) and the total decay constant of Steiger and Jäger, Reference Steiger and Jäger1977. 40Ar/39Ar ages cited in this study, including the new ones for Loreto, were recalculated using the most recent optimization calibration of Niespolo et al., Reference Niespolo, Rutte, Deino and Renne2017, and suggest an age of 1.1891 Ma for Alder Creek sanidine (related to the total K decay constant of Renne et al., Reference Renne, Balco, Ludwig, Mundil and Min2011). Analytical results were reduced using the ArArCALC V2.4 software (Koppers, Reference Koppers2002), which can be found in supplementary material 2 and 3. Procedural blank measurements were performed after every two or three unknown samples. Mass discrimination correction was monitored by measurements of air argon of various beam sizes and was calculated relative to a 40Ar/36Ar ratio of 298.56 (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Marti, Severinghaus, Kawamura, Hee-Soo, Lee and Kim2006).

ESR and ESR/U-series

Electron spin resonance (ESR) and combined ESR/U-series (ESR–US) dating methods were applied on Loreto sediments and fossil mammal teeth, respectively. These trapped-charge methods are based on the accumulation of electrons released by natural radioactivity over time in defects of the considered mineral samples. The total dose of radiation absorbed by a sample during its geological history (expressed in grays, Gy) can be extrapolated from ESR analyses, therefore the duration of the natural irradiation, which reflects the age of the sample, is obtained by dividing this total dose by the dose rate to which the sample is submitted yearly. This dose rate is mainly determined from the radionuclide contents of the sample and its immediate environment (sediments) and from cosmic dose contribution. In situ and laboratory dosimetry measurements using portable Inspector 1000 Canberra© and laboratory HPGe Ortec© γ spectrometers, respectively, were consequently performed on Loreto sediments.

ESR dating on optically bleached quartz

In the case of sedimentary quartz ESR dating, the dated event corresponds to sediment burial after exposure of the quartz grains to sunlight during the transport phase prior to deposition. This exposure leads to an optical bleaching of the quartz ESR signals, mainly those linked to aluminum (Al) and titanium (Ti) impurity centers. If Ti centers can be quickly (for ESR) and completely bleached by light exposure, the presence in quartz aluminum centers of “deep aluminum traps” (DAT) that cannot be reset by the energy provided by sunlight makes it necessary to determine for each sample the level of “residual” ESR intensity, corresponding to the maximum bleaching of the Al signals into the quartz grains, prior to any age calculation (Tissoux et al., Reference Tissoux, Voinchet, Lacquement, Prognon, Moreno, Falguères, Bahain and Toyoda2012). For aluminum centers, to take into account the part of centers that cannot be reset by light exposure, one aliquot was exposed for 1600 hours to light in a Dr Honhle SOL2 solar simulator (light intensity between 3.2 and 3.4 × 105 Lux). The value of the ESR intensity of this bleached aliquot was then systematically subtracted from the ESR intensities of all the other aliquots (DAT, Tissoux et al., Reference Tissoux, Voinchet, Lacquement, Prognon, Moreno, Falguères, Bahain and Toyoda2012) of the same sample prior to the DE calculation. A bleaching rate δbl (%), reflecting the relative importance of bleachable and non-photosensitive centers, is determined by comparison of the ESR intensities of the natural (Inat) and bleached (Ibl) aliquots: δbl = ([Inat−Ibl]/Inat) × 100. To minimize this, an ESR multi-center approach that was based on the systematic measurements of both aluminum (Al) and titanium–lithium (Ti–Li) signals was used on the Loreto sample.

In the present work, the samples were prepared as explained by Voinchet et al. (Reference Voinchet, Pereira, Nomade, Falguères, Biddittu, Piperno, Moncel and Bahain2020). After extraction of the pure quartz 100–200 μm grain-size fraction of the sediments, the sample was split into 11 aliquots. Nine of the aliquots were irradiated at doses ranging between ~200 and 15,000 Gy using a panoramic 60Co source (Dolo et al., Reference Dolo, Lecerf, Mihajlovic, Falguères and Bahain1996) with a dose rate of ~200 Gy/h, one aliquot was preserved as reference (natural aliquot), and the last aliquot was exposed to artificial light in a SOL2 Hohle© solar simulator for 1600 hours in order to estimate the residual Intensity of the Al signal. ESR measurements were performed at the MNHN laboratory, Paris, at 107°K with a Bruker EMX spectrometer using the experimental conditions proposed by Voinchet et al., Reference Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Laurent, Dolo, Despriée and Gageonnet2004: 5 mW and 10 mW microwave power, 20 mT sweep width, 100 kHz modulation frequency, 0.1 mT modulation amplitude, 40 ms conversion time, 20 ms time constant. Each aliquot was measured three times after a rotation of 120° of its initial position in the cavity. This protocol was repeated on three different days, resulting in nine measurements for each aliquot.

The Al-signal ESR intensities were measured between the top of the first peak at g = 2.018 and the bottom of the 16th peak at g = 2.002 (Toyoda and Falguères, Reference Toyoda and Falguères2003) while the Ti–Li ESR intensities were measured from the g = 1.913 peak bottom and the baseline and the Ti–H intensities were measured between the g = 1.917 peak apex and the baseline (Toyoda et al., Reference Toyoda, Tsukamoto, Hameau, Usui and Suzuki2006) Equivalent doses (DE) were derived from the obtained intensity growth curves using an “exponential + linear” function with Microcal© OriginPro 8 software with 1/I2 weighting (Voinchet et al., Reference Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Laurent, Dolo, Despriée and Gageonnet2004) (see supplementary material 1, S3).

The dose rate was determined from radionuclide activities derived both from in situ and laboratory gamma-ray spectrometry measurements. The following parameters were used in the age calculation: dose-rate conversions factors (from Guérin et al., Reference Guérin, Mercier and Adamiec2011); k-value of 0.15 ± 0.1 (Laurent et al., Reference Laurent, Falguères, Bahain, Rousseau and Van Vliet-Lanoë1998); alpha and beta attenuations (from Brennan et al., Reference Brennan, Lyons and Phillips1991; Brennan, Reference Brennan2003); water attenuation formulae (from Grün, Reference Grün1994); cosmic dose rate estimated from the Prescott and Hutton's (Reference Prescott and Hutton1994) equations. The internal dose rate was considered as negligible because of the low contents of radionuclides usually found in quartz grains (Murray and Roberts, Reference Murray and Roberts1997; Vandenberghe et al., Reference Vandenberghe, De Corte, Buylaert, Kučera and Van den haute2008). ESR age estimates are given with one sigma error range.

ESR/U-series on teeth

As mentioned previously, post-mortem uranium-uptake phenomena into dental tissues complicates the estimation of the dose rate due to its associated variation over the time. The age of a given tooth is then deduced from both ESR and U-series data through the modeling of the U-uptake (and eventually leaching) kinetics for each dental tissue. The analytical and mathematical protocols used for calculating combined ESR/U-series ages have been described by Bahain et al. (Reference Bahain, Voinchet, Vietti, Shao, Tombret, Pereira, Nomade and Falguères2021) and Shao et al. (Reference Shao, Bahain, Dolo and Falguères2014), respectively.

The external enamel layer of each tooth was mechanically sampled, cleaned on each side in order to avoid any contamination by sediment, dentine, or cementum, ground, sieved, and the 100–200 μm grain-size fraction extracted. The extracted sample was split into 10 aliquots. One aliquot was kept as natural reference and the other nine were irradiated using 60Co calibrated source (LNHB, CEA, CEN Saclay, France) at exponentially increasing doses until ~10–20,000 grays (Gy). The ESR intensity of each aliquot was measured at MNHN, Paris, at room temperature using a Bruker EMX spectrometer with the following parameters: 10 mW microwave power, 0.1 mT modulation amplitude, 10 mT scan range, 4 mins scan time, and 100 kHz frequency modulation. At least four measurements were performed for each aliquot on different days. The ESR intensities were measured peak-to-peak (T1–B2) from the g = 2.00018 enamel ESR signal according to Grün (Reference Grün2000). Equivalent doses DE (see supplementary material 1, S4) were extrapolated from the obtained ESR dose-response curves using “exponential plus linear” function using Microcal© OriginPro 8 software with 1/I2 weighting.

U-series analyses were obtained for each dental tissue using the chemical protocol of Shao et al. (Reference Shao, Bahain, Falguères, Peretto, Arzarello, Minelli and Hohenstein2011): 50–150 mg of each analyzed tissue was dissolved in 7N HNO3 and spiked with 233U, 236U, and 229Th. The solution was then passed through an anion exchange resin column (Dowex 1 × 8; 100–200 mesh) in 8N HCl to fix U, then eluted with 0.1N HCl. The U and Th fractions were purified using a UTEVA resin column in 7N HNO3 and a second anion exchange resin column in 7N HNO3, respectively. U and Th were then eluted with 0.1N HCl and 8N HCl, respectively. Lastly, for the Q–ICP–MS measurements, purified U and Th were re-dissolved in 0.5N HNO3. The measurements were then performed using Thermo electron© iCAP–RQ Q–ICP–MS.

The U-uptake parameters, dose-rate contributions, and ESR/U-series ages were then calculated in relation with the U-uptake kinetics (see details in Bahain et al., Reference Bahain, Voinchet, Vietti, Shao, Tombret, Pereira, Nomade and Falguères2021). Several models combining U-series and ESR data were used in the present study. The US model (Grün et al., Reference Grün, Schwarcz and Chadam1988) introduces an uptake parameter, p, describing a continuous incorporation of uranium in the considered dental tissue. Because the US model does not allow an age calculation if uranium loss (leaching) occurred after incorporation, Shao et al. (Reference Shao, Bahain, Falguères, Dolo and Garcia2012) proposed a new model called Accelerating Uptake (AU) model, in which incorporation is described as a process accelerating over time. For the calculations, another uptake parameter, n, is defined to describe the evolution of the uranium content in the tissue under consideration (supplementary material 1, S5). The ESR/U-series age calculations were performed using MATLAB© “USESR” and “AUESR” computer programs written by Shao Qingfeng, in which the age uncertainty (1σ) is calculated with a mathematical algorithm using a Monte Carlo approach (Shao et al., Reference Shao, Bahain, Dolo and Falguères2014).

The following parameters were used during the age calculation process: k-value (α efficiency) of 0.13 ± 0.02 (Grün and Katzenberger-Apel, Reference Grün and Katzenberger-Apel1994); water content of 0 wt% in the enamel and 7 wt% in the dentine and cementum; conversion contents–doses factors from Guérin et al. (Reference Guérin, Mercier and Adamiec2011); for each dental tissue, Rn loss was estimated from both gamma and Q–ICP–MS measurements (Bahain et al., Reference Bahain, Yokoyama, Falguères and Sarcia1992); beta dose contributions were corrected from the enamel part removed on each side of the enamel layer during the preparation process (Brennan et al., Reference Brennan, Rink, McGuirl, Schwarcz and Prestwich1997).

Lastly, in order to evaluate the quality of the paleodosimetric reconstruction, an isochron diagram (Blackwell and Schwarcz, Reference Blackwell and Schwarcz1993) displaying the individual equivalent dose values versus the total internal dose modeled by ESR/U-series for the analyzed teeth was for the dated level A. Both the relevance of the dose rate reconstruction and an age estimation for the studied level can be extrapolated from the obtained diagram.

Revision of the lithic assemblage of layer A

The whole lithic assemblage stored for the lower Paleolithic layer A has been revised. To perform these studies, we used the common definition of the modes of debitage and flaking processes and we referred to the definition employed for middle Pleistocene sites in Europe (Rossoni-Notter et al., Reference Rossoni-Notter, Notter, Simone and Simon2016; V. Villa et al., Reference Villa, Soriano, Grün, Marra, Nomade, Pereira, Boschian, Pollarolo, Fang and Bahain2016; Moncel et al., Reference Moncel, Santagata, Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain and Daujeard2020). The material integrated in this work is preserved at the National Archaeological Museum of Venosa (Basilicata, Italy). While conducting this study, special focus was paid to the description of the cores and flakes to better detail and characterize the core technologies (core types and sizes, removals organization, platforms, raw material shapes and natural forms, and, for the flakes, the removals, butts, shapes, and retouches). To carry out these new analyses, we referred to the works of Barral and Simone (Reference Barral and Simone1983, Reference Barral, Simone and Pigorini1984) and Crovetto (Reference Crovetto1993) that already studied the typology of the main pieces (general sizes, raw material, categories, types of retouches).

RESULTS

Geochronology

40Ar/39Ar on single grains

Results for the two samples are presented as probability diagrams (Fig. 4). Both probability diagrams are multimodal and demonstrate a very important reworking of various volcanic units. Except for two crystals from LOR 2013-01 and two others from LOR 2013-02, all the crystals analyzed are older than 670 ka (see Fig. 4), suggesting reworking of crystals corresponding to the earliest explosive activity of Mount Vulture volcano (Foggianello synthem; Giannandrea, Reference Giannandrea and Principe2006).

Figure 4. 40Ar/39Ar probability diagrams obtained for Loreto LOR 2013-01 and LOR 2013-02.

For LOR 2013-01 the two youngest crystals are centered around 607.5 ± 2 ka and for LOR 2013-02 the young crystal indicates an age of 581.6 ± 7 ka. These two ages cannot be considered as the depositional ages of the related sedimentary levels, but they can provide determinant geochronological information.

ESR

The results of the ESR analysis performed using the multicenter approach are displayed in Table 2. The equivalent doses determined from both aluminum and titanium–lithium centers are very homogeneous for the two sets of measurements and allow the calculation of a mean age of 340 ± 41 ka for deposition of this level, which is located at the top of the stratigraphic sequence of Loreto (close in elevation to the C level).

Table 2. ESR data and ages of Loreto 2013-03 sediment. Data are expressed with one sigma (1σ) error range.

ESR/U-series

U-series and ESR/U-series data and ages are displayed in Tables 3 and 4, respectively. The U contents measured in the Loreto dental tissues are quite high, especially in tooth VL-854 in which they are higher than 11 ppm and 1000 ppm in the enamel and cementum tissues, respectively. Because these two tissues also display high 230Th/234U ratios, the internal dose rate contributions are consequently important and the corresponding ESR/U-series age is the youngest of the heterogeneous set of results, as showed by a multimodal probability plot ranging from 293 ± 33 ka (VL-A854) to 480 ± 95 ka (VL-252), and leading to a quadratic weighted mean age of 344 ± 120 ka (2σ), which seems to be greatly underestimated despite its large uncertainty. These results seem to be greatly dependent on the U-uptake kinetics reconstructions, therefore in order to verify the validity of the dosimetric reconstruction, we tried to fit an isochron diagram for the Loreto LOR A teeth (Tables 3 and 4; Fig. 5). The VL-854 tooth seems definitively out of range in comparison with the three other teeth that show an excellent regression line fit (R 2 > 0.99), allowing the calculation of an isochron age around 561 ± 50 ka (2σ), which is in better agreement with the geological age estimation. This isochron diagram indicated that the paleodosimetric reconstruction seems well representative of the historical dose rate for these three teeth, which is in accord with Bahain et al. (Reference Bahain, Voinchet, Vietti, Shao, Tombret, Pereira, Nomade and Falguères2021).

Table 3. U-series and ESR data of the Loreto A teeth. Data are given with two sigma error range.

Table 4. ESR/U-series data and ages of the Loreto A teeth. Data are given with two sigma error range.

Figure 5. Age density probability plots (left, built using Isoplot 3.0 software, Ludwig, Reference Ludwig2003) and isochron plots (right) obtained for the Loreto samples. The U-uptake accumulated dose corresponds to the sum of the internal (enamel) and beta dose (corresponding to dentine and cement) reconstructed for the considered sample along its entire geological history from the modeled uptake parameters.

Lithic assemblage of the archeological layer A

Barral and Simone (Reference Barral and Simone1983, Reference Barral, Simone and Pigorini1984) and Crovetto (Reference Crovetto1993) totaled 528 artefacts in layer A. Globally, the material is fresh, covered sometimes by patches of breccia. The assemblage is composed of two groups of tools associated with cores: (1) heavy-duty tools that display a significant diversity of the raw material used; pebbles/cobbles on limestone (84%), sandstone (14%), volcanic rocks, quartzite/quartz (only 1%), and one in flint (c.f., Crovetto, Reference Crovetto1990); and (2) light–heavy-duty tools (n = 156) made of various types of flint collected as small slabs or small nodules/pebbles in regard to the cortex. The flint is sometimes of bad quality with inclusions. The origin is possibly local, collected in situ for some according to Barral and Simone (Reference Barral, Simone and Pigorini1984) and Crovetto (Reference Crovetto1990).

Heavy-duty tools

This category totals 145 pieces (27% of the total) (Crovetto, Reference Crovetto1993). Most of the series is composed of entire pebbles (n = 51), broken pebbles (n = 25), pebbles with a single removal (n = 15, hammerstones?), and pebble tools (n = 54). The selected pebbles are thick and short. The shaped part is diversified, pointed, and convex with many or some unifacial or bifacial removals. Some pebble tools could be described as chopper-cores based on the distribution of the removals (n = 4). There are also some thick “rabot” types and one unifacial pick (n = 4) Entire pebbles and pebble tools measure similar length (50–125 mm). Only one large cutting tool can be described as a biface or “proto-biface” (c.f., Barral and Simone, Reference Barral, Simone and Pigorini1984) on a flint partially cortical flake (despite mainly small available flint nodules/slabs). It is shaped by some large and deep removals, without secondary retouches. The tool is irregular, asymmetrical, and has a curved cross-section (120–60–25 mm) (see Fig. 6).

Figure 6. Examples of the industries from layer A at the Venosa Loreto site. (a) “Proto-biface” in flint; (b) 1, 2: Limestone pebble tools with abrupt removals; 3: flint flake-tool with peripheral denticulates retouch; 4: flint peripheral scraper with a scaled retouch; 5, 6: flint “déjeté” points with a few invasive retouches; 7: limestone unifacial core with crossed removals; 8: flint core with peripheral and abrupt removals. Drawing from G. Vicino in Barral and Simone, Reference Barral, Simone and Pigorini1984; photo by M.-H. Moncel.

Light–heavy-duty tools and core technology

The revision of the cores allows estimation of a total of 18 in flint and 10 on other stones (9 on limestone and one on quartzite). The flint cores are polyhedral, pyramidal, bipyramidal, Clactonian-type, and “atypical.” The standardization is low with a large diversity of categories due to the limited number of removals. The debitage uses the natural shape of the raw material, with frequently a cortical platform and one main debitage surface. Possibly, three cores were made on a single large flake. For the cores in other raw materials, they are mainly with one debitage face or orthogonal with two surfaces made on a nodule or pebble side with abrupt centripetal removals (see Fig. 6).

The flint cores have an average size of 30–53 mm with a mean thickness of 20–30 mm. The limestone cores, which constitute the second most represented raw material, have an average length of ~70 mm. Three flint cores are retouched.

The flake assemblage is made of short and thick flakes with a flat striking platform with open angles that are typical of the Clactonian-type debitage. The limestone flakes are often cortical and possibly constitute remains of pebble-tool façonnage. Many flint flakes carry either cortical patches or are without cortex with a back and centripetal removals.

Most of the flake-tools are in flint (94%). The other flakes, made in other materials, are not retouched. The series is composed of 156 flake-tools (including 147 on siliceous stones) and 185 unretouched flakes. The size range of the flake-tools is 50–70 mm, which is similar to the size of the unretouched flakes. The flake-tools are mainly scrapers opposed to a back, denticulates, notches, some points, and multiple tools with invasive, abrupt, and “scalariform” retouches. We noted some bifacial and direct-inverse retouches.

The hypothesis of the introduction on the occupation of material on flint has to be considered, which would make the 20 m2 archeological layer that was excavated the record of “specialized occupations or activities.” There are few flint cores compared to the number of flakes. The ratio of flake-tools is high, mainly made on flint. Pebble tools and an additional debitage could have been made in situ.

DISCUSSION

Dating of archaeological horizon A (LOR A)

To determine the age of the Lower Paleolithic level A, we applied three distinct geochronometers: the 40Ar/39Ar on single crystal laser fusion, the ESR/U-series on teeth, and the ESR on bleached quartz. Unfortunately, the 40Ar/39Ar results do not allow a direct age to be assigned to the sedimentary layers analyzed. Indeed, the probability diagrams obtained for both LOR 2013-01 and LOR 2013-02 highlight the reworking of numerous ancient volcanic events (see Fig. 4). However, the youngest juvenile crystal from LOR 2013-01, which was dated around 610 ka, ensures that archaeological level A is younger than this age. Interestingly, this age of 610 ka fits well within uncertainties of the reworked eruption evidence found at the top of the Notarchirico sequence (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Voinchet, Bahain, Falguères, Garon, Lefèvre, Raynal, Scao and Piperno2015), corresponding in age to the San Michele or Ventaruolo subsynthems (see Table 1). The age of the young crystal dated in LOR 2013-02 (around 585 ka) is chronologically coherent with the last eruptive phase of the Monte Vulture supersynthem (Melfi synthem, see Table 1; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009). It is worth noting that neither probability diagram indicates occurrences of reworked eruptions from 680–615 ka associated with the Rionero (630 ± 20 and 714 ± 18 ka) and Toppo San Paolo (646 ± 7 and 673 ± 19 ka) subsynthems activities of the Monte Vulture supersynthem (see Barile Unit; Brocchini et al., 1994; Villa and Buettner, Reference Villa and Buettner2009).

While these activities are the ones mainly found within the Notarchirico stratigraphy (Piano Regio Formation of the Venosa basin, MIS 16), they are completely absent at Loreto. These results agree perfectly with the work of Lefèvre et al. (Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010), who suggested, based on stratigraphy and tephrostratigraphy, that the Piano Regio Formation was fully eroded in the axial part of the basin. Lefèvre et al. (Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet and Piperno1999, Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010) consequently suggested that the Tufarelle Formation lies unconformably above the Fonte del Comune Formation (recording the Foggianello synthem volcanic activity deposits; see Table 1). Even if the 40Ar/39Ar data do not bring direct chronological constraints for level A, they provide an additional argument fitting well with the interpretation of Lefèvre et al. (Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010) who suggested an age between about 484 ± 8 and 530 ± 22 ka (Case Lopes subsynthem).

The ESR age (340 ± 41 ka) that was calculated on bleached quartz from sample LOR 2013-03, collected at the top of the sequence, is altimetrically close to archaeological level C, which is constituted by evolved Acheulean industries. An age corresponding to the end of the Lower Paleolithic or to the beginning of the Middle Paleolithic is thus very possible. Unfortunately, the lack of data on the archaeological material of this level prevents a more thorough interpretation of this deposit. A reinvestigation of the site (archaeological and geological) would be needed to ensure the existence of a such human occupation during the MIS 9–11 period in Basilicata. This age also constitutes a minimum age for archaeological levels A and B.

The ESR/U-series ages obtained from the four teeth are all greatly underestimated due to the fundamental contribution of U-uptake kinetics. However, the isochron diagram obtained for three of the four dated teeth suggests an age for the teeth at 561 ± 50 ka (2s). This age suggests a MIS 13 (or the end of MIS 14) age for level A, which is in good agreement with Lefèvre et al., Reference Lefèvre, Raynal, Vernet, Kieffer and Piperno2010, who proposed an age ranging between 484 ± 8 and 530 ± 22 ka. This is also in accordance with the previous interpretations of the paleontological assemblages that were correlated to the MIS 13 interglacial phase (Piperno et al., Reference Piperno, Lefèvre, Raynal, Tagliacozzo and Piperno1999).

Several things are needed if we want to improve the chronology of the various archaeological levels. Firstly, it would be essential to make new excavations on the original Loreto at Venosa site to test and/or sharpen the results obtained here. Secondly, it would also be very important to deeply study the chronology and geochemistry of the numerous synthems/subsynthems of Mount Vulture Volcano and correlate them with stratigraphies in the surrounding basins. Because the sites of Loreto at Venosa, Notarchirico, and Cimitero di Atella are unique testimonies of the emergence of the Acheulean and Lower Paleolithic occupations in southern Italy, it would be also crucial to provide detailed geochronological investigations of the sedimentary successions of the Venosa and Atella basins to provide accurate correlations between sites. As demonstrated in numerous previous studies (Marra et al., Reference Marra, Rohling, Florindo, Jicha, Nomade, Pereira and Renne2016; V. Villa et al., Reference Villa, Pereira, Chaussé, Nomade, Fusco, Limondin-Lozouet and Degeai2016; Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Falguères, Bahain, Tombret, Garcia, Voinchet, Bulgarelli and Anzidei2017, Reference Pereira, Monaco, Marra, Nomade, Gaeta, Leicher and Palladino2020), tephrochronology is a very powerful tool for synchronizing archaeological, paleontological, paleoenvironmental, and/or paleoclimatic records. This improvement of knowledge regarding the eruptive history of Mount Vulture will be an essential point to understand the emergence and expansion of the Acheulean in this key area of Europe.

Loreto lithic strategies in the MIS 13 framework

Loreto's assemblage has been described as Early Tayacian and compared to assemblages from Baume–Bonne (France), Isernia la Pineta (Italy, unit T3c), or Notarchirico (Di Cesnola and Mallegni, Reference Di Cesnola, Mallegni and Millon1996; Piperno et al., Reference Piperno, Lefèvre, Raynal and Tagliacozzo1998; Grifoni and Tozzi, Reference Grifoni and Tozzi2006) despite the poor knowledge about their ages. The Tayacian culture has been defined by the description of “Tayac” points and above all by the occurrence of invasive abrupt and stepped retouches on flake-tools (Henri-Martin, Reference Henri-Martin1954; de Lumley, Reference de Lumley1960) associated with denticulates, notches, and becs. Another main point relies on the scarcity of bifaces within the related assemblages.

Considering the attribution of archeological layer A to the interglacial MIS 13, our objectives are now to understand the place of this assemblage within the MIS 13 framework in Western Europe. The names and locations of the MIS 13 sites from Western Europe and of the other sites cited in the text are reported Figure 7. The European archeological data published so far for these sites are relatively diversified (core technologies, flake-tools, and ratio of bifaces). This is due either to traditions or to specific activities. To ensure the accuracy of our techno-lithic comparisons between the Loreto assemblage and other sites it is necessary to focus on sites: (1) that are, like Loreto, located in a context of diversified available raw materials; and (2) for which we can observe common features.

Figure 7. Locations of key European Paleolithic sites for the period investigated.

One of the apparently suitable Lower Paleolithic sites is the one of Fontana Ranuccio located in Central Italy (Anagni basin) that has been recently dated to the period contemporaneous of the MIS 11 interglacial (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Nomade, Moncel, Voinchet, Bahain, Biddittu and Falguères2018). Indeed, both sites are characterized by a small-size shaping and debitage interconnected and by a diversity of light-duty tools component. In other close sites, from the Roman province dated to MIS 11 (Torre in Pietra [level m], Malagrotta) and MIS 13 (Cretone, Osteria Moricone) the debitage is made of small cores with few bifaces associated to many and diversified flake-tools (Ceruleo et al., Reference Ceruleo, Marra, Pandolfi, Petronio and Salari2015, Reference Ceruleo, Rolfo, Marra, Petronio, Salari and Gatta2019; P. Villa et al., Reference Villa, Pereira, Chaussé, Nomade, Fusco, Limondin-Lozouet and Degeai2016, Reference Villa, Boschian, Pollarolo, Saccà, Marra, Nomade and Pereira2021; Marra et al., Reference Marra, Pereira, Boschian and Nomade2022).

The site showing the closest lithic assemblage to Loreto is the MIS 13 site of Visogliano, which is located in the north of the Italian peninsula (see Fig. 7). Indeed, a diversity of stones as well as the presence of core technologies and two partial bifacial tools/cores have been documented at Visogliano (Falguères et al., Reference Falguères, Bahain, Tozzi, Boschian, Dolo, Mercier, Valladas and Yokoyama2008). Likewise, at Aldène, France (levels possibly at the end of MIS 13), the series is composed of many pebble-tools, evidence of Clactonian-type flaking (Ashton et al., Reference Ashton, Cook, Lewis and Rose1992; Rossoni-Notter et al., Reference Rossoni-Notter, Notter, Simone and Simon2016), and thick flake-tools. At Caune de l'Arago (unit II, MIS 13, levels H, I, J), in a context of seasonal occupations, the series did not yield bifaces, but there are many pebble-tools on quartz and the gathering of good-quality stones in a perimeter of 5–30 km. There is a complex debitage on the good-quality stones, simpler on quartz with some evidence of Clactonian-type debitage. The retouch of flake-tools is often abrupt and thick (Barsky, Reference Barsky2013).

For northwestern of Europe, in a context of main flint use, MIS 13 sites are characterized by the presence (or not) of bifaces inducing diverse pene-contemporaneous traditions. At High Lodge, for example, bifaces are totally absent, while at Boxgrove and Cagny-la-Garenne, bifaces compose the series in various proportions (Ashton et al., Reference Ashton, Cook, Lewis and Rose1992; Lamotte and Tuffreau, Reference Lamotte, Tuffreau and Tuffreau2001; Garcia-Medrano et al., Reference García-Medrano, Ollé, Ashton and Roberts2019). The debitage is mainly unipolar or Clactonian-type, even if some evidence of more complex core technology exists (e.g., Levallois-type; Moncel et al., Reference Moncel, Ashton, Arzarello, Fontana, Lamotte, Scott and Muttillo2021). Flake-tools are diverse and mainly of large size, composed of scrapers (large and invasive retouches at High Lodge), denticulates, and notches.

A deeper analysis of the material of Loreto, including micro-wear study, raw material identification, and detailed knowledge of the technological strategies is necessary to better characterize MIS 13 human strategies in southern Europe, before the long glacial event of MIS 12 recorded a behavioral shift.

CONCLUSIONS

The Basilicata region is known for hosting three major Lower Paleolithic sites associated with the emergence and diffusion of the Acheulean culture in Europe: Notarchirico, Cimitero di Atella, and Loreto. However, the site of Loreto was never dated directly before the present study, thus making its comparison with other sites tenuous. In this contribution, we applied three absolute dating methods relying on distinct physical principles to date the Lower Paleolithic level A of Loreto. The techniques applied (ESR/U-series, ESR, and 40Ar/39Ar) provided complementary results, which allowed us to propose a MIS 13 age for this level, in agreement with the geological and paleontological works published more than ten years ago. Re-study of the lithic material kept in the collections of the National Archaeological Museum of Venosa, combined with a better-known chronological context, allowed comparisons of the Loreto records within the rare MIS 13 data in Western Europe. While technical similarities are similar to other European MIS 13 sites such as Visogliano (Italy) or Aldène (France), deeper analyses of the material of Loreto are needed and would contribute to better characterize MIS 13 human strategies in southern Europe.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2023.71.

Acknowledgments

All the works carried out at Loreto and Notarchirico could not have been done without the investment of Marcello Piperno who dedicated more than 30 years to the study of the Acheulean in Basilicata and greatly contributed to illuminating the potential of this region in the study of the European Early Paleolithic. We dedicate this article to Marcello, without whom this study would never have seen the light of day. We also thank Grazia Maria Bulgarelli for her precious help during the sampling campaigns led in 2013.

We thank the ATM “Les dynamiques socio-écosystémiques, entre perturbations et résiliences environnementales et culturelles” of the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle of Paris—project “Acheulean and volcanism in Italy” conducted by M.H. Moncel (MNHN) and J.-J. Bahain (MNHN), the PHC Galileo project no. 28237WA “l'Acheuléen en Italie méridionale: Chronologie, Paleoanthropologie, Cultures” led by J.-J. Bahain (MNHN) and C. Peretto (UNIFE), and the ERC-Adv. LATEUROPE n°101052653 led by Marie-Hélène Moncel, which allowed the funding of the sampling mission and analysis. We also thank the Leakey Foundation for funding part of the analysis (project SJ 47-19, 2019-2021, “Early evidence of Acheulean bifacial technology in Europe. New fieldwork at Notarchirico, Italy”).

Footnotes

(deceased)

References

Alberdi, M.T., Caloi, L., Palombo, M.R., 1988. The Quaternary fauna of Venosa: equids. Bulletin du Musée d'Anthropologie Préhistorique de Monaco 31, 539.Google Scholar
Ashton, N.M., Cook, J., Lewis, S.G., Rose, F. (Eds.), 1992. High Lodge: Excavations by G. de G. Sieveking, 1962–8, and J. Cook, 1988. British Museum Press, London, 192 pp.Google Scholar
Bahain, J.-J., Voinchet, P., Vietti, A., Shao, Q., Tombret, O., Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Falguères, C., 2021. ESR/U-series and ESR dating of several middle Pleistocene Italian sites: comparison with 40Ar/39Ar chronology. Quaternary Geochronology 63, 101151. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quageo.2021.101151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bahain, J.-J., Yokoyama, Y., Falguères, C., Sarcia, M.N., 1992. ESR dating of tooth enamel: a comparison with K–Ar dating. Quaternary Science Reviews 11, 245250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baissas, P., 1980. Données paléomagnétique et sédimentologique sur les dépôts de la coupe de Loreto (Venosa, Basilicate, Italie). Bulletin du Musée d'Anthropologie Préhistorique de Monaco 24, 1356.Google Scholar
Barral, L., Heinichen-Chiappella, G., Simone, S., 1978. Datazione relativa del giacimento di Loreto (Venosa, Basilicata). Atti Della XX Riunione Scientifica dell Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria in Basilicata, 1620 Ottobre 1976, Firenze, pp. 125132.Google Scholar
Barral, L., Simone, S., 1983. Le bassin fluvio-lacustre de Venosa (Basilicata). Bulletin du Musée d'Anthropologie Préhistorique de Monaco 27, 519.Google Scholar
Barral, L., Simone, S., 1984. Venosa–Loreto, Basilicata. In: Catalogo I prim’ abitanti d'Europa, Museo Nazionale Preistorico Etnografico. Pigorini, L., De Luca Editori, pp. 181186.Google Scholar
Barsky, D., 2013. The Caune de l'Arago stone industries in their stratigraphical context. Comptes Rendus Palevol 12, 305325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackwell, B.A., Schwarcz, H.P., 1993. ESR isochron dating for teeth: a brief demonstration in solving the external dose calculation problem. Applied Radiation and Isotopes 44, 243252.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blanc, A.C., 1953. Venosa, gisement à industrie tayacienne et micoquienne de Loreto. IV Congress Internationale INQUA, Livret Guide, pp. 6368.Google Scholar
Bonadonna, F.P., Brocchini, D., Laurenzi, M.A., Principe, C., Ferrara, G., 1993. Mt. Vulture Volcano chronostratigraphy and paleogeographic implications. In: Follieri, M., Girotti, O., Kotasakis, T., Taddeucci, A., Turner, C. (Eds.), Abstracts. INQUA SEQS Symposium, Quaternary Stratigraphy in Volcanic Areas, Rome, September 20–22, 1993, p. 13Google Scholar
Bonifay, M.F., 1977. Liste préliminaire de la grande faune du gisement préhistorique de Venosa. Bulletin du Musée d'Anthropologie Préhistorique de Monaco 21, 115125.Google Scholar
Brennan, B., 2003. Beta doses to spherical grains. Radiation Measurements 37, 299303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brennan, B.J., Rink, W.J., McGuirl, E.L., Schwarcz, H.P., Prestwich, W.V., 1997. Beta doses in tooth enamel by ‘‘one-group’’ theory and the ROSY ESR dating software. Radiation Measurements 27, 307314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brennan, B., Lyons, R., Phillips, S., 1991. Attenuation of alpha particle track dose for spherical grains. Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements 18, 249253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brocchini, D., 1993. Il Vulcano Vulture (Basilicata). Cronologia radiometrica ed evoluzione. MSc thesis, Università di Pisa, 70 pp.Google Scholar
Brocchini, D., La Volpe, L., Laurenzi, M.A., Principe, C., 1994. Storia evolutiva del Mt. Vulture. Plinius 12, 2225.Google Scholar
Ceruleo, P., Marra, F., Pandolfi, L., Petronio, C., Salari, L., 2015. The archaic Acheulean lithic industry of the Cretone basin (Latium, central Italy). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 3, 480492.Google Scholar
Ceruleo, P., Rolfo, M.F., Marra, Fabrizio, Petronio, C., Salari, L., Gatta, M., 2019. New chronological framework (MIS 13–9) and depositional context for the lower Palaeolithic sites north-west of Rome: revisiting the early hominin in central Italy. Quaternary International 510, 119132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiappella, G., 1964. Il Paleolitico inferiore di Venosa. Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana 73, 723.Google Scholar
Cortini, M., 1975. Età K–Ar del Monte Vulture (Lucania). Rivista Italiana di Geofisica 2, 4546.Google Scholar
Crovetto, C., 1990. L'industrie de Venosa–Loreto (Tayac en ancien): recherche de régularités (nature du matérieu, forme, technique de taille), analyse statistique, classification. Master's thesis. Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris.Google Scholar
Crovetto, C., 1993. Le Paleolithique inferieur de Loreto. Bulletin du Musée d'Anthropologie Prehistorique de Monaco 36, 3157.Google Scholar
de Lumley, H., 1960. Clactonien et Tayacie dans la région méditerranéenne française: note de Monsieur Henry de Lumley présentée par Jean Piveteau. Comptes Rendus des Séances de l'Académie des Sciences 250, 18871888.Google Scholar
Di Cesnola, A.P., Mallegni, F., 1996. Le Paléolithique Inférieur et Moyen en Italie (Vol. 1). Editions Millon, Jérôme, Grenoble, France.Google Scholar
Doglioni, C., Mongelli, F., Pieri, P., 1994. The Puglia uplift (SE-Italy): an anomaly in the foreland of the Apenninic subduction due to buckling of a thick continental lithosphere. Tectonics 13, 13091321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolo, J.M., Lecerf, N., Mihajlovic, V., Falguères, C., Bahain, J.-J., 1996. Contribution of ESR dosimetry for irradiation of geological and archaeological samples with a 60Co panoramic source. Applied Radiation and Isotopes 47, 14191421.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Orazio, M., Innocenti, F., Tonarini, S., Doglioni, C., 2007. Carbonatites in a subduction system: the Pleistocene alvikites from Mt. Vulture (southern Italy). Lithos 98, 313334CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falguères, C., Bahain, J.-J., Tozzi, C., Boschian, G., Dolo, J.-M., Mercier, N., Valladas, H., Yokoyama, Y., 2008. ESR/U-series chronology of the Lower Palaeolithic palaeoanthropological site of Visogliano, Trieste, Italy. Quaternary Geochronology 3, 390398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Florindo, F., Marra, F., Angelucci, D.E., Biddittu, I., Bruni, L., Florindo, F., Gaeta, M., et al., 2021. Environmental evolution, faunal and human occupation since 2 Ma in the Anagni basin, central Italy. Scientific Reports 11, 7056. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-85446-5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gagnepain, J., 1996. Étude magnétostratigraphique de sites du Pléistocène inférieur et moyen des Alpes maritimes et d'Italie: grotte du Vallonet, Marina Airport, Ca'Belvedere di Monte Poggiolo, Isernia la Pineta, Venosa Loreto. Thèse du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, 3 vol.Google Scholar
García-Medrano, P., Ollé, A., Ashton, N., Roberts, M.B., 2019. The mental template in handaxe manufacture: new insights into Acheulean lithic technological behavior at Boxgrove, Sussex, UK. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 26, 396422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giannandrea, P., 2006. Il bacino fluvio-lacustre di Venosa. In: Principe, C. (ed.), La Geologia del Monte Vulture, Regione Basilicata. Arti Grafiche Finiguerra, Lavello, Italy, pp. 5573.Google Scholar
Giannandrea, P., La Volpe, L., Principe, C., Schiattarella, M., 2004. Carta geologica del Monte Vulture alla scala 1:25.000. Litografia Artistica Cartografica, Firenze, Italy.Google Scholar
Grifoni, R., Tozzi, C., 2006. L’émergence des identités culturelles au Paléolithique inférieur: le cas de l'Italie. Comptes Rendus Palevol 5, 137148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grün, R., 1994. A cautionary note: use of the “water content” and “depth for cosmic ray dose rate” in AGE and DATA programs. Ancient TL 12, 5051.Google Scholar
Grün, R., 2000. Methods of dose determination using ESR spectra of tooth enamel. Radiation Measurements 32, 767772.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grün, R., Katzenberger-Apel, O., 1994. An alpha irradiator for ESR dating. Ancient TL 12, 3538.Google Scholar
Grün, R., Schwarcz, H.P., Chadam, J.M., 1988. ESR dating of tooth enamel: coupled correction for U-uptake and U-series disequilibrium. Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements 14, 237241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guérin, G., Mercier, N., Adamiec, G., 2011. Dose-rate conversion factors: update. Ancient TL 29, 58.Google Scholar
Henri-Martin, G., 1954. Le Tayacien. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 51, 2731.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koppers, A.A.P., 2002. ArAr CALC—software for 40Ar/39Ar age calculations. Computers & Geosciences 28, 605619.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamotte, A., Tuffreau, A., 2001. Les industries acheuléennes de Cagny (Somme) dans le contexte de l'Europe du nordouest. In: Tuffreau, A. (Ed.), L'Acheuléen dans la Vallée de la Somme et le Paléolithique Moyen dans le Nord de la France: Données Récentes. Publications du Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Préhistoriques 6, 149153.Google Scholar
Laurent, M., Falguères, C., Bahain, J-J., Rousseau, L., Van Vliet-Lanoë, B., 1998. ESR dating of quartz extracted from Quaternary and Neogene sediments: method, potential and actual limits. Quaternary Science Reviews 17, 10571061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
La Volpe, L., Principe, C., 1994. Il Monte Vulture. Guida all'escurzione Generale Pre-Congressuale. 77th Congresso Nazionale della Società Geologica Italiana, Bari.Google Scholar
Lee, J.Y., Marti, K., Severinghaus, J.P., Kawamura, K., Hee-Soo, Y., Lee, J.B., Kim, J.S., 2006. A redetermination of the isotopic abundances of atmospheric Ar. Geochimica Et Cosmochimica Acta 70, 45074512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Pilleyre, T., Vernet, G., 1993. Contribution à la chronostratigraphie de la série de Venosa-Notarchirico (Basilicata). Atti Della XXX Riunione Scientifica, Paleosuperfici del Pleistocene e del Primo Olocene in Italia. Processi di Formazione e Interpretazione. Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria, Firenze, pp. 117-128.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Vernet, G., 1999. Un bassin, un volcan. Enregistrements Pléistocènes dans le bassin de Venosa. In: Piperno, M. (Ed.), Notarchirico: un Sito del Pleistocene Medio-antico nel Bacino di Venosa (Basilicata). Osanna, Venosa, Italy, pp. 139173.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Vernet, G., Kieffer, G., Piperno, M., 2010. Tephro-stratigraphy and the age of ancient Southern Italian Acheulean settlements: the sites of Loreto and Notarchirico (Venosa, Basilicata, Italy). Quaternary International 223–224, 360368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Vernet, G., Pilleyre, T., Piperno, M., Sanzelle, S., Fain, J., Miallier, D., Montret, M., 1994. Sédimentation, volcanisme et présence humaine dans le bassin de Venosa (Basilicata, Italie) au Pléistocene moyen: exemple du site de Notarchirico. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 91, 103112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ludwig, K.R., 2003. Isoplot 3.0, a geochronological toolkit for Microsoft Excel. Berkeley Geochronology Center Special Publication 4, 71 pp.Google Scholar
Marra, F., Nomade, S., Pereira, A., Petronio, C., Salari, L., Sottili, G., Bahain, J., 2018. A review of the geologic sections and the faunal assemblages of Aurelian Mammal Age of Latium (Italy) in the light of a new chronostratigraphic framework. Quaternary Science Reviews 181, 173199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marra, F., Pereira, A., Boschian, G., Nomade, S., 2022. MIS 13 and MIS 11 aggradational successions of the Paleo-Tiber delta: geochronological constraints to sea-level fluctuations and to the Acheulean sites of Castel di Guido and Malagrotta (Rome, Italy). Quaternary International 616. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2021.12.016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marra, F., Rohling, E.J., Florindo, F., Jicha, B., Nomade, S., Pereira, A., Renne, P.R., 2016 Independent 40Ar/39Ar and 14C age constraints on the last five glacial terminations from the aggradational successions of the Tiber River, Rome (Italy). Earth and Planetary Science Letters 449, 105117CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moncel, M.-H., Ashton, N., Arzarello, M., Fontana, F., Lamotte, A., Scott, B., Muttillo, B., et al., 2021. Early Levallois core technology between MIS 12 and 9 in Western Europe. Journal of Human Evolution 139, 102735. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2019.102735.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moncel, M.-H., Santagata, C., Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Voinchet, P., Bahain, J.J., Daujeard, C., et al., 2020. The origin of early Acheulean expansion in Europe 700 ka ago: new findings at Notarchirico (Italy). Scientific Reports 10, 13802. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-68617-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murray, A.S., Roberts, R.G., 1997. Determining the burial time of single grains of quartz using optically stimulated luminescence. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 152, 163180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Niespolo, E.M., Rutte, D., Deino, A., Renne, P.R., 2017. Intercalibration and age of the Alder Creek sanidine 40Ar/39Ar standard. Quaternary Geochronology 39, 205213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nomade, S., Gauthier, A., Guillou, H., Pastre, J.F., 2010. 40Ar/39Ar temporal framework for the Alleret maar lacustrine sequence (French Massif Central): volcanological and paleoclimatic implications. Quaternary Geochronology 5, 2027.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nomade, S., Renne, P.R., Vogel, N., Deino, A.L., Sharp, W.D., Becker, T.A., Jaouni, A.R., Mundil, R., 2005. Alder Creek sanidine (ACs-2): a Quaternary 40Ar/39Ar dating standard tied to the Cobb Mountain geomagnetic event. Chemical Geology 218, 315338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peccerillo, A., 2005. Plio-Quaternary volcanism in Italy. Petrology, Geochemistry, Geodynamics. Springer, Heidelberg, 365 pp.Google Scholar
Pereira, A., Monaco, L., Marra, F., Nomade, S., Gaeta, M., Leicher, N., Palladino, D.M., et al., 2020. Tephrochronology of the central Mediterranean MIS 11c interglacial (~425–395 ka): new constraints from the Vico Volcano and Tiber Delta, central Italy. Quaternary Science Reviews 243, 106470. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Falguères, C., Bahain, J.-J., Tombret, O., Garcia, T., Voinchet, P., Bulgarelli, G.-M., Anzidei, A.-P., 2017. New 40Ar/39Ar and ESR/U-series data for the La Polledrara di Cecanibbio archaeological site (Lazio, Italy). Journal of Archaeological Science: Report 15, 2029.Google Scholar
Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Moncel, M.-H., Voinchet, P., Bahain, J.J., Biddittu, I., Falguères, C., et al., 2018. Integrated geochronology of Acheulian sites from the southern Latium (central Italy): insights on human–environment interaction and the technological innovations during the MIS 11–MIS 10 period. Quaternary Science Reviews 187, 112129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Shao, Q., Bahain, J.-J., Arzarello, M., Douville, E., Falguères, C., et al., 2016. 40Ar/39Ar and ESR–U/Th dates for Guado San Nicola, middle Pleistocene key site at the lower/middle Palaeolithic transition in Italy. Quaternary Geochronology 36, 6775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Voinchet, P., Bahain, J.J., Falguères, C., Garon, H., Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Scao, V., Piperno, M., 2015. The earliest securely dated hominin fossil in Italy and evidence of Acheulian occupation during glacial MIS 16 at Notarchirico (Venosa, Basilicata, Italy). Journal of Quaternary Science 30, 639650.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peretto, C., Arnaud, J., Moggi-Cecchi, J., Manzi, G., Nomade, S., Pereira, A., Falguères, C., et al., 2015. A human deciduous tooth and new dating results from the middle Pleistocene site of Isernia La Pineta, Italy. PLoSONE 10, e0140091. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0140091CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Petronio, C., Ceruleo, P., Marra, F., Pandolfi, L., Rolfo, M.F., Salari, L., Sottili, G., Moro, P.A., 2017. A novel multidisciplinary bio- and geo-chronological approach for age determination of Palaeolithic bone artifacts in volcanic settings: an example from eastern Sabatini, Latium, Italy. Quaternary International 438, 8189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piccarreta, G., Ricchetti, G., 1970. I depositi del bacino fluvio-lacustre della fiumara di Venosa–Mattinella e del torrente Basentello. Memorie della Società Geologica Italiana 9, 121134.Google Scholar
Pilleyre, Th., Sanzelle, S., Fain, J., Miallier, D., Montret, M., 1999. Essai de dattaion par thermoluminescence des dépôts du site acheuléen de Notarchirico. In: Piperno, M. (Ed.), Notarchirico: un Sito del Pleistocene Medio-antico nel Bacino di Venosa (Basilicata). Osanna, Venosa, Italy, pp. 235243.Google Scholar
Piperno, M., Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Tagliacozzo, A., 1998. Notarchirico, an early middle Pleistocene site in the Venosa basin. Anthropologie 36, 8590.Google Scholar
Piperno, M., Lefèvre, D., Raynal, J.P., Tagliacozzo, A., 1999. Conclusioni generali. In: Piperno, M. (Ed.), Notarchirico: un Sito del Pleistocene Medio-antico nel Bacino di Venosa (Basilicata). Osanna, Venosa, Italy, pp. 537543Google Scholar
Prescott, J.R., Hutton, J.T., 1994. Cosmic ray contributions to dose rates for luminescence and ESR dating: large depths and long-term time variations. Radiation Measurements 23, 497500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raynal, J.P., Lefèvre, D., Vernet, G., 1999. Lithostratigraphie du site acheuléen de Notarchirico (avec la collaboration de G. Papy). In: Piperno, M. (Ed.), Notarchirico: un Sito del Pleistocene Medio-antico nel Bacino di Venosa (Basilicata). Osanna, Venosa, Italy, pp. 175206.Google Scholar
Raynal, J.P., Lefevre, D., Vernet, G., Pilleyre, T., Sanzelle, S., Fain, J., Miallier, D., Montret, M., 1998. Sedimentary dynamics and tecto-volcanism in the Venosa Basin (Basilicata, Italia). Quaternary International 47–48, 97105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rellini, U., 1932. Sulla scoperta di una strato pre-amigdaliano a Loretello di Venosa e sugli indizi probabili di un'età proto-litica in Italia. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 50–51, 111Google Scholar
Renne, P.R., Balco, G., Ludwig, K.R., Mundil, R., Min, K., 2011. Response to the comment by W.H. Schwarz et al. on “Joint determination of 40K decay constants and 40Ar*/40K for the Fish Canyon sanidine standard, and improved accuracy for 40Ar/39Ar geochronology” by P. Renne R. et al. (2010). Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75, 50975100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rossoni-Notter, E., Notter, O., Simone, S., Simon, P., 2016. Acheulean technical behaviors in Aldène Cave (Cesseras, Hérault, France). Quaternary International 409, 149173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schiattarella, M., Beneduce, P., Di Leo, P., Giano, S.I., Giannandrea, P., Principe, C., 2005. Assetto strutturale ed evoluzione morfotettonica Quaternaria del Vulcano del Monte Vulture (Appennino Lucano). Bollettino della Società Geologica Italiana 124, 543562.Google Scholar
Segre, A.G., Piperno, M., 1984. Veno'a-Notarchirico, Basilicata. In: Catalogo I prim’ abitanti d'Europa, Museo Nazionale Preistorico Etnografico. Pigorini, L., De Luca Editori, pp. 186188.Google Scholar
Shao, Q., Bahain, J.-J., Falguères, C., Dolo, J.-M., Garcia, T., 2012. A new U-uptake model for combined ESR/U-series dating of tooth enamel. Quaternary Geochronology 10, 406411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shao, Q., Bahain, J.-J., Falguères, C., Peretto, C., Arzarello, M., Minelli, A., Hohenstein, U.T., et al., 2011. New ESR/U-series data for the early middle Pleistocene site of Isernia la Pineta, Italy. Radiation Measurements 46, 847852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shao, Q., Bahain, J.J., Dolo, J.M., Falguères, C., 2014. Monte Carlo approach to calculate US–ESR age and age uncertainty for tooth enamel. Quaternary Geochronology 22, 99106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singer, B.S., 2014. A Quaternary geomagnetic instability time scale. Quaternary Geochronology 21, 2952.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiger, R.H., Jäger, E., 1977. Subcommission on Geochronology: convention on the use of decay constants in geo- and cosmo-chronology. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 36, 359362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tissoux, H., Voinchet, P., Lacquement, F., Prognon, F., Moreno, D., Falguères, C., Bahain, J.-J., Toyoda, S., 2012. Investigation on non-optically bleachable components of ESR aluminium signal in quartz. Radiation Measurements 47, 894899.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toyoda, S., Falguères, C., 2003. The method to represent the ESR signal intensity of the aluminium hole centre in quartz for the purpose of dating. Advances in ESR Applications 20, 710.Google Scholar
Toyoda, S., Tsukamoto, S., Hameau, S., Usui, H., Suzuki, T., 2006 Dating of Japanese Quaternary tephras by ESR and luminescence methods. Quaternary Geochronology 1, 320326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vandenberghe, D., De Corte, F., Buylaert, J.P., Kučera, J., Van den haute, P., 2008. On the internal radioactivity in quartz. Radiation Measurements 43, 771775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vernet, G., Raynal, J.P., Lefèvre, D., Kieffer, G., 1999. Tephras distales dans les dépôts du Plaistocène moyen de Venosa (Basilicata, Italia). In: Piperno, M. (Ed.), Notarchirico: un Sito del Pleistocene Medio-antico nel Bacino di Venosa (Basilicata). Osanna, Venosa, Italy, pp. 207233.Google Scholar
Villa, I.M., Buettner, A., 2009. Chronostratigraphy of Monte Vulture Volcano (southern Italy): secondary mineral microtextures and 39Ar–40Ar systematics. Bulletin of Volcanology 71, 11951208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Villa, P., Boschian, G., Pollarolo, L., Saccà, D., Marra, F., Nomade, S., Pereira, A., 2021. Elephant bones for the middle Pleistocene toolmaker. PLoS ONE 16, e0256090. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256090.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Villa, P., Soriano, S., Grün, R., Marra, F., Nomade, S., Pereira, A., Boschian, G., Pollarolo, L., Fang, F., Bahain, J.-J., 2016. The Acheulian and early middle Paleolithic in Latium (Italy): stability and innovation. PLoS ONE 11, e0160516. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160516.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Villa, V., Pereira, A., Chaussé, C., Nomade, S., Fusco, F., Limondin-Lozouet, N., Degeai, J.P., et al., 2016. New chronostratigraphy for Valle Giumentina (Abbruzzo, Italy): a 150,000 years long middle-Pleistocene archaeological sequence. Quaternary Science Reviews 151, 160184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voinchet, P., Bahain, J.J., Falguères, C., Laurent, M., Dolo, J.M., Despriée, J., Gageonnet, R., 2004. ESR dating of quartz extracted from Quaternary sediments: application to fluvial terraces system of northern France. Quaternaire 15, 135141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voinchet, P., Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Falguères, C., Biddittu, I., Piperno, M., Moncel, M.-H., Bahain, J.-J., 2020. SR dating applied to optically bleached quartz – a comparison with 40Ar/39Ar chronologies on Italian middle Pleistocene sequences. Quaternary International 556, 113123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Satellite image from of the study area (Google Earth software). The archaeological sites of Venosa Loreto, Notarchirico, and Cimitero di Atella (white stars), as well as the towns and lakes (white dots) that gave their names to the main volcanic synthems of the Mount Vulture area are located.

Figure 1

Table 1. Synthesis showing the various volcanic and sedimentary subsynthems of the Mount Vulture Volcano (modified from Giannandrea, 2006). The Venosa basin formations are correlated by tephrostratigraphy to the Monte Vulture units (Lefèvre et al., 1999, 2010).

Figure 2

Figure 2. (a) Schematic cross-section of the Venosa Basin showing the location of Loreto hill and Vn 88-1 drilling. (b) Lithostratigraphy of the Vn 88-1 drilling correlated with the Venosa basin formations (redrawn from Lefèvre et al., 1999, 2010); A–D = Tufarelle Formation members; R1 = tephra/volcanic deposit.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Stratigraphic positions of the samples collected at Loreto (modified from Barral and Simone, 1983; Lefèvre et al., 1994; and Gagnepain, 1996).

Figure 4

Figure 4. 40Ar/39Ar probability diagrams obtained for Loreto LOR 2013-01 and LOR 2013-02.

Figure 5

Table 2. ESR data and ages of Loreto 2013-03 sediment. Data are expressed with one sigma (1σ) error range.

Figure 6

Table 3. U-series and ESR data of the Loreto A teeth. Data are given with two sigma error range.

Figure 7

Table 4. ESR/U-series data and ages of the Loreto A teeth. Data are given with two sigma error range.

Figure 8

Figure 5. Age density probability plots (left, built using Isoplot 3.0 software, Ludwig, 2003) and isochron plots (right) obtained for the Loreto samples. The U-uptake accumulated dose corresponds to the sum of the internal (enamel) and beta dose (corresponding to dentine and cement) reconstructed for the considered sample along its entire geological history from the modeled uptake parameters.

Figure 9

Figure 6. Examples of the industries from layer A at the Venosa Loreto site. (a) “Proto-biface” in flint; (b) 1, 2: Limestone pebble tools with abrupt removals; 3: flint flake-tool with peripheral denticulates retouch; 4: flint peripheral scraper with a scaled retouch; 5, 6: flint “déjeté” points with a few invasive retouches; 7: limestone unifacial core with crossed removals; 8: flint core with peripheral and abrupt removals. Drawing from G. Vicino in Barral and Simone, 1984; photo by M.-H. Moncel.

Figure 10

Figure 7. Locations of key European Paleolithic sites for the period investigated.

Supplementary material: File

Pereira et al. supplementary material 1

Pereira et al. supplementary material
Download Pereira et al. supplementary material 1(File)
File 2.9 MB
Supplementary material: File

Pereira et al. supplementary material 2

Pereira et al. supplementary material
Download Pereira et al. supplementary material 2(File)
File 20 KB
Supplementary material: File

Pereira et al. supplementary material 3

Pereira et al. supplementary material
Download Pereira et al. supplementary material 3(File)
File 20.9 KB