Aetokremnos

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Aetokremnos is a rock shelter near Limassol on the southern coast of Cyprus. It is situated on a steep cliff site ca. 40m above the Mediterranean. The name means "Cliff of the eagles" in Greek. Ca. 40 m2 have been excavated. Of the four layers found, No. 3 is sterile.

The site contains both bones of the late Holocene dwarf fauna, pygmy elephants (Elephas cypriotes) and the Cyprus Dwarf Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus minor) and artifacts (ca. 1,000 flints including thumbnail scrapers of Mesolithic type). There are no bones with marks of butchery, but an unusually high frequency of burned bones (30%). The pygmy hippos make up ca. 74% of the bones, followed by fish remains (25%) and birds, mainly bustards. Dwarf elephants are comparatively rare (3 individuals). The presence of fallow deer (4 bones) and pig (13 bones) is puzzling, since these animals are thought to have been introduced only in the PPNB period.

According to the excavators, hearth remains are found in the layer containing the bone beds of the extinct megafauna. This would make it the oldest Cypriot settlement and attest settlement already in the Epipalaeolithic. 31 radiocarbon dates with a high internal consistency put the date of the bones at ca. 10,500 BC cal. and make it a short-term occupation.

There are other deposits with bones of pygmy elephants and hippopotami on the island, but these do not contain artifacts.

References

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