1st Edition

The Prehistoric Rock Art of Portugal Symbolising Animals and Things

Edited By George Nash, Sara Garcês Copyright 2024
388 Pages 129 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

388 Pages 129 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

388 Pages 129 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Prehistoric Rock Art of Portugal presents significant interpretive perspectives in Portuguese rock art research and offers an excellent representation of core rock art areas, along with current thinking and interpretations. The various chapters deliver a personal approach to the many issues, themes and approaches that are embedded within the rock art of the outpost of western Atlantic... Read more

Introduction: Changes and Dynamics in Western Iberian Prehistoric Rock Art

GEORGE NASH AND SARA GARCÊS

  1. The Discovery of Paleolithic Art in Portugal: The Escoural Cave
  2. ANTÓNIO CARLOS SILVA, SARA GARCÊS AND CARLOS CARPETUDO

  3. Looking through Rock Eyes: Being Upper Palaeolithic in the Côa Valley and Its Territory of Lithic Raw Material Sourcing
  4. ANDRÉ TOMÁS SANTOS

  5. The Palaeolithic Rock Art of Northern Portugal and Galicia (Spain)
  6. SOFIA FIGUEIREDO-PERSSON, JOANA VALDEZ-TULLETT, RAMÓN FÁBREGAS VALCARCE, ARTURO DE LOMBERA-HERMIDA, AND XOSÉ PEDRO RODRÍGUEZ-ALVAREZ

  7. Philosophical Mechanics of An Engraved Horse: The Upper Palaeolithic Open-Air Rock Art within the Tagus River Basin, Central Portugal
  8. GEORGE NASH AND SARA GARCÊS

  9. From Hunter-Gatherer to Farmer or Something in Between: The Rock Art of Early Holocene
  10. JOANA CASTRO TEIXEIRA AND MARIA DE JESUS SANCHES

  11. Understanding the Painted Form: The Archaeometric Studies
  12. HUGO GOMES AND PIERLUIGI ROSINA

  13. Schematic Art Paintings in Northern Portugal
  14. LARA BACELAR ALVES AND MÁRIO REIS

  15. Painted Schematic Rock Art within Central and Southern Portugal
  16. SARA GARCÊS AND GEORGE NASH

  17. The Tagus River Rock Art (Central Portugal)
  18. SARA GARCÊS 

  19. The Guadiana Valley Rock Art Complex
  20. HIPÓLITO COLLADO GIRALDO, JOSÉ JULIO GARCÍA ARRANZ AND SARA GARCÊS

  21. Picturing in Western Iberian Neolithic Dolmens
  22. GEORGE NASH

  23. Atlantic Rock Art of the Northwest Portugal
  24. DANIELA CARDOSO

  25. Thinking about the Bronze Age Rock Art of Portugal: What's New?
  26. ANA M. S. BETTENCOURT

  27. Iron Age Rock Art: Old and New Figures
  28. FERNANDO COIMBRA 

  29. GIS Applications in Rock Art

  30. SARA GARCÊS, DIONYSIOS DANELATOS, RITA FERREIRA ANASTÁCIO AND GEORGE NASH

 

 

Biography

Sara Garcês is a Rock Art Researcher, Contract Researcher and Guest-Assistant Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of Tomar. She is also a Researcher at the Geosciences Centre of the University of Coimbra (u. ID73 – FCT), and Earth and Memory Institute (ITM) in Portugal. Dr Garcês is a specialist in post-Paleolithic rock art of Iberian Peninsula and gained her doctorate at Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro University in Portugal. Dr. Garcês is engaged with paintings and engravings 2D and 3D tracing and several multidisciplinary research projects about prehistoric pigments archaeometry across Iberian Peninsula, UK, Israel, Italy, and Brazil. Her research also focuses on archaeological rock art pigment analyses both in caves and open-air contexts. Her doctoral research is based on the prehistoric rock art of Tagus River Basin. Currently, Dr Garcês is engaged in TURARQ project and FIRST-ART project. Dr Garcês has authored three books on Tagus rock art and has written papers in several national and international journals.

George Nash is an Associate Professor at IPT, a Researcher at the Geosciences Centre of the University of Coimbra (u. ID73 – FCT), and Earth and Memory Institute (ITM) in Portugal and an Associate Researcher within the Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool. Dr Nash is a specialist in Palaeolithic rock art, and gained his doctorate at NTNU, Trondheim, Norway. Here, Dr Nash researched engraved and painted hunter-gatherer rock art along coastal Norway and Levantine Spain. Between 1998 and 2016, Dr Nash taught at the University of Bristol and was responsible for the latter part of the part-time degree in Archaeology. Dr Nash has undertaken research from many parts of the world and has published over 170 peer-reviewed articles and has edited, co-edited and written 48 books. In 2022, Dr Nash was invited to advise and participate in a six-part television series that dealt with the movement of early modern humans in Europe and the rock art they produced. Dr Nash is currently part of the First Art team, undertaking fieldwork in the caves and rock shelters of Spain and Portugal.