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Notes on Some Mousterian Finds in Spain and Irak

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2013

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Extract

The following sites were discovered by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Milton and myself during the summer and autumn of 1926, while I was excavating the Devil's Tower Cave at Gibraltar.

(i) Llanos de la Horadada. This is a surface site, lying on rising ground to the west of the road from San Roque to the Rio Guadiaro, near the seventh kilometre-stone out of San Roque. The Llanos de la Horadada is a group of low hills forming a southern extension of the Sierra del Arco; it takes its name from a tunnel-like cave, the Cueva de la Horadada, which runs through an outcrop of Eocene sandstone about 1 km. to the west of the road.

In a recently-ploughed field lying immediately above the road we found a small number of flint and quartzite implements, two of which, a small disc and a chopper, were unmistakably Mousterian (Fig. II, Nos. 1 and 2). The implements and flakes were all slightly abraded, and those which were made of flint were deeply patinated, some being white and others light brown.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1927

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References

page 269 note * Institut de Paléontologie Humaine: Travaux exécutés en 1912. Anthropologie t. xxiv., 1913.

page 269 note † Breuil, H.. Stations Chelléenes de la Province de Cadiz. Inst. francais d'anthr. t. ii. 1914Google Scholar.

page 269 note — Observations sur les terres noires de la Laguna de la Janda. Anthropologie t. xxviii. 1917Google Scholar.