The long-awaited analysis of the faunal remains goes far beyond a mere
presentation of primary archaeozoological data to investigate the ways
in which the Magdalenian site occupants incorporated hunting and
subsistence into their daily life and social organisation. Methods
including targeted strategies of radiocarbon dating, analyses of
mortality patterns of horse, the main prey animal, meticulous recording
of evidence for butchery, and the plotting and interpretation of spatial
patterning of animal remains place the faunal data in context.
Integrating these approaches the authors have produced a convincing
description of a Magdalenian settlement occupied seasonally in response
to environmental opportunities and constraints, organised according to a
strict spatial template and functioning as a semi-permanent village,
thus foreshadowing the fullsedentarism emerging in the contemporary Near
East.