During the Bronze Age the human groups of Cantabria buried their dead on the surface of narrow caves. This cultural tradition, common to the Basque Country and Cantabria, extends to eastern Asturias. This work focuses on the taphonomical study of the human remains found in 1993 in the cave of El Espinoso, located in Ribadedeva (Asturias). The cavity was used as a burial place for a minimum of twenty individuals of both sexes and different ages. This site constitutes the only collective burial cave currently known from the Bronze Age in Asturias (other later prehistoric burial caves in the region –El Toral III, La Llana, Fuentenegroso, etc.– have single burials). A funerary tradition of cave burial lasted over two thousand years in eastern Asturias. The taphonomical analysis provides a theoritical and methodological framework adequate to the study this type of superficial deposits, affected by complex post-depositional processes.
CITATION STYLE
González-Rabanal, B., González-Morale, M. R., & Marín-Arroyo, A. B. (2017). La tafonomía como marco metodológico para interpretar depósitos funerarios superficiales: Estudio de la cueva sepulcral de El Espinoso (Ribadedeva, Asturias). Trabajos de Prehistoria, 74(2), 278–295. https://doi.org/10.3989/tp.2017.12195
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