Papers by FRANCISCO GAMBIN CARRASQUILLA
Dirección General Marítima, 2018
Pronóstico climático del Caribe Colombiano, 2015
Aparejadores: boletín del Colegio Oficial de Aparejadores y Arquitectos Técnicos de Sevilla, 1997
Pronóstico climático del Caribe Colombiano, 2015
Kalathos Revista Del Seminario De Arqueologia Y Etnologia Turolense, 1991
Fauna De La Cueva De Nerja I Salas De La Mina Y De La Torca Campanas 1980 82 1995 Isbn 84 920268 1 2 Pags 375 399, 1995
Archaeofauna International Journal of Archaeozoology, 1992
Archaeofauna International Journal of Archaeozoology, 1994
Archaeofauna International Journal of Archaeozoology, 1993
Huelva Arqueologica, 1988
Boletin Del Museo De Zaragoza, 1998
Archaeofauna International Journal of Archaeozoology, 1993
Cazadores Recolectores En El Pirineo Navarro Sitio De Aizpea Entre 8000 Y 6000 Anos Antes De Ahora 2002 Pags 269 278, 2002
Arqueologia Medieval, 1993
Fauna De La Cueva De Nerja I Salas De La Mina Y De La Torca Campanas 1980 82 1995 Isbn 84 920268 1 2 Pags 219 293, 1995
Revista De Anillamiento, 2002
1 O Congresso De Arqueologia Peninsular Actas Vol 3 1994 Pags 441 446, 1994
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 1995
This paper aims to emphasize the importance of imported commensal faunas in archaeological contex... more This paper aims to emphasize the importance of imported commensal faunas in archaeological contexts by reporting on the earliest known house sparrows and house mice from the Iberian peninsula. The finds, which date to the Iron Age of a hinterland area of the peninsula, have been identified on the basis of osteomorphological and osteometrical criteria, which are specified in the text in order to demonstrate the reliability of the identification. The temporal and geographical coincidence of these remains in the two sites analysed with those of donkey and, secondarily, chicken remains and faunal remains of littoral origin, lends support to the hypothesis that these animals arrived with the earliest trans‐Mediterranean colonizers to the southern shores of the Iberian peninsula and spread involuntarily thereafter as ‘side‐products’ of the Phoenician commercial routes throughout the Iberian hinterland.
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Papers by FRANCISCO GAMBIN CARRASQUILLA