The site includes human occupations between the Middle Paleolithic (ca 41,000 years ago) to AD 1400, including Mousterian, Early Upper Paleolithic, Solutrean, Magdalenian, Azilian, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic, and Bronze Age deposits. The intensive Neolithic occupation includes a series of levels, and the presence of charred wheat grains representing emmer (Triticum dicoccum), einkorn (T. monococcum), and bread (T. durum) wheats at dates of 5550 +/-40 BP. Also in the assemblage are domestic sheep, goat, cattle and pigs, and some wild red deer.
The site has been excavated since the mid-1990s by the El Mirón Prehistoric Project, led by Lawrence Guy Straus and Manuel González Morales.
Sources
Peña-Chocarro, Leonor, et al. 2005 The oldest agriculture in northern Atlantic Spain: new evidence from El Mirón Cave (Ramales de la Victoria, Cantabria). Journal of Archaeological Science 32(5):579-587.
Straus, L. G. Straus, M. González Morales, W. R. Farrand, and W. J. Hubbard. 2001. Sedimentological and stratigraphic observations in El Mirón, a late Quaternary cave site in the Cantabrian Cordillera, Northern Spain. Geoarchaeology 16:603-630.
Straus, L.G. 2005 The Upper Paleolithic of Cantabrian Spain. Evolutionary Anthropology 14(4):145-158.
Straus, L.G. 2006 Of stones and bones: Interpreting site function in the Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic of Western Europe. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25:500-509.

