Reviewing the upper Pleistocene human footprints from the ‘Sala dei Misteri’ in the Grotta della Bàsura (Toirano, northern Italy) cave: An integrated morphometric and morpho-classificatory approach
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Publication Date
8-1-2017
Publication Title
Quaternary Science Reviews
Volume Number
169
Abstract
About thirty human footprints made approximately 12,000 years B.P. inside the ‘Sala dei Misteri’ Cave of Básura near Toirano, Liguria, northern Italy, were studied by standard ichnological analysis. Eleven of the best-preserved tracks were examined further using morpho-classificatory and morphometric approaches, in order to estimate the minimum number of trackmakers; biometric measurements were also used to tentatively determine their physical characteristics (e.g., height and age). Results indicate at least three different producers, two youths and the third of tender age. Analysis of the data demonstrate the power of 3D, of landmark-based morphometrics, and the utility of methods of forensic anthropology in the determination of human footprints. The study of the number of trackmakers using the principal component analysis (PCA) on 'multi-trampling' surfaces could represent a model in the ichnological study of cave sites.
Keywords
Human remains (Archaeology), Footprints, Caves, Paleolithic period, Forensic anthropology
Document Type
Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.05.016
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Citton, Paolo; Romano, Marco; Salvador, Isabella; and Avanzini, Marco, "Reviewing the upper Pleistocene human footprints from the ‘Sala dei Misteri’ in the Grotta della Bàsura (Toirano, northern Italy) cave: An integrated morphometric and morpho-classificatory approach" (2017). KIP Articles. 8400.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_articles/8400
