Abstract
This paper presents a quantification method for archaeological molluscs using fragmentation categories. By employing the data from nine prehistoric sites (13000 to 5000 bp; 15700 to 5700 cal bp) in Cantabrian Spain (northern Spain), it has been shown that traditional methods, based on one or two anatomical elements, systematically produce a loss in the minimum number of individuals (MNI) that is sometimes significant. This paper also proposes using fragmentation categories in the calculation of the fragmentation index. In addition, based on these indices, a reflection is made on the difficulty involved in associating the amount of fragmentation of the shells with the taphonomic processes that have occurred at the archaeological sites, especially in discerning which agents have caused the fragmentation. © University of Oxford, 2011.
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Gutiérrez Zugasti, F. I. (2011). Shell fragmentation as a tool for quantification and identification of taphonomic processes in archaeomalacological analysis: The case of the cantabrian region (northern spain). Archaeometry, 53(3), 614–630. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2010.00561.x
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