Agent-based least-cost path analysis and the diffusion of Cantabrian Lower Magdalenian engraved scapulae
Authored by Claudine Gravel-Miguel, Colin D Wren
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2018.08.014
Sponsors:
Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5782/releases/1.1.0/
Abstract
At the root of numerous archaeological research projects is a need to
understand how mobility impacted the lives of our ancestors. Recent
technological advances have made it easy for archaeologists to rely on
Geographic Information Systems' least-cost path tools to identify the
single easiest path to move between two points set in a realistically
rugged landscape; however, least-cost path tools work on the assumption
that the whole world is perfectly known, which does not represent human
mobility accurately in all cases. Here, we present an agent based
least-cost path (AB-LCP) model, which does not make the assumption of
complete landscape knowledge, and allows creating multiple anisotropic
least-cost paths that take the traveler's local perspective and
incomplete knowledge into consideration. We demonstrate the model's
potential through a case study of the geographical distribution of
Cantabrian (Spain) Lower Magdalenian engraved scapulae, which provides
an interesting extension to current understanding of Magdalenian
mobility, showcasing the flexibility and potential of this new LCP tool
to study archaeological landscapes. The results of our study suggest
that the studied engraved scapulae may have been created at El Castillo,
and then brought to Altamira for transmission to other sites. The
results show that El Castillo was strategically located on a bottleneck
for coastal-to-plain mobility, whereas Altamira was located along social
paths connecting other contemporaneous sites. This supports the
already-accepted notion that both sites may have served for Upper
Paleolithic population aggregation. However, our research builds on this
idea by explaining why these two sites would have become so important.
We suggest that Altamira was strategically placed near the boundary of
inter-regional groups, thus taking the role as an aggregation site for
unrelated populations, whereas El Castillo would have been used by the
intra-regional group population to congregate during the summer and take
advantage of the local mosaic of resources.
Tags
Agent-based model
Social networks
Dispersal
systems
CAVE
information
mobility
Landscapes
Spain
Least-cost path
Geographic information
system
Lower magdalenian
Altamira
El castillo
El cierro
Paleolithic art