Campaniforme no funerario en la provincia de Toledo: El yacimiento de Las Vegas. De nuevo el Valle de Huecas

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Abstract

This article presents the latest results of the excavations at the site of Las Vegas in Huecas (Toledo). The site is located in an open area, near a stream and at the foot of the Valle de las Higueras necropolis. It is buried by a considerable colluvial deposition and was detected by geophysical survey. The site lacks structures and is made up of a single archaeological layer: it is a secondary deposit, containing Bell Beaker pottery and metal. A 14C sample has dated it to the second half of the 3rd millennium BC. Ceramics are the most abundant remain from this deposit. Macroscopic and X-ray Fluorescence (FRX) analysis of the ceramics indicates a local production, the fast formation of this deposit, and its long-term exposure on the surface. We suggest that it was formed by cleaning and maintenance activities carried out in a nearby occupational area. We suggest that settlement occurred in the valley bottom, with occupations whose ceramic productions differ from the ones found in funerary contexts.

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APA

Bermejo, R. B., Ramírez, P. B., Cuesta, A. V., Odriozola Lloret, C. P., Uribelarrea del Val, D., Jiménez, O. L., … de los Terreros, J. Y. S. (2015). Campaniforme no funerario en la provincia de Toledo: El yacimiento de Las Vegas. De nuevo el Valle de Huecas. Trabajos de Prehistoria, 72(1), 145–157. https://doi.org/10.3989/tp.2015.12148

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