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All faunal remains were analyzed at the Laboratories of the IMF-CSIC and the Universitat de Barcelona. All faunal remains from the selected S.U.s were analyzed, categorized and registered irregardless of their type and fragmentation level. Whenever fragments could positively be related to one another, they were treated as one individual. All faunal remains were subsequently bagged by taxonomic attribution and are stored at the IMF-CSIC (carrer d'Egipcíaques 19, Barcelona, Catalunya): https://www.imf.csic.es. The anatomic and taxonomic attribution was done thanks to 1) the osteological modern collections at the IMF-CSIC and at the Universitat de Barcelona 2) diagnostic criteria established and published in the following illustrated skeletal guides and references: Cuvier & Brongiart, 1824; Boessneck et al., 1964; Pales & Lambert, 1971; Barone, 1976; Eisenmann, 1986; Davis, 1987; Prummel, 1987; Prummel, 1988; Cohen & Serjeantson, 1996; Eisenmann, 1986; Callou, 1997; Wilkens, 2002; Rādulet, 2006; Adams & Crabtree, 2011, Hanot & Bochaton, 2018 etc.) The age of death for the main mammals was estimated thanks to the degree of fusion between the epiphysis and the diaphysis (Silver, 1969; Purdue, 1983; Jones, 2006; Smith, 1969; Hancox, 1988). The chronological attribution to the Iberian phase (4th-2nd c. BCE) was confirmed by radiocarbon dating done by the Beta Analytic Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory: https://www.radiocarbon.com. The chronological attribution to the Medieval phase (10th-14th c. CE) was mostly done through ceramic analysis: https://www.tdx.cat/handle/10803/669933#page=1.
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