Title:
Differing modes of animal exploitation in North-Pontic Eneolithic and Bronze
Age Societies
Author(s):
Mileto, Simona; Kaiser, Elke; Rassamakin, Yuri; Whelton, Helen; Evershed, Richard P.
Year of publication:
2018
Available Date:
2018-05-18T13:19:29.971Z
Abstract:
This paper presents new results of an interdisciplinary investigation of the
diet and subsistence strategies of populations living in the North-Pontic
region during the Eneolithic and the Early Bronze Age (ca. 3800 BC to the 2500
BC). New organic residue analyses of >200 sherds from five Eneolithic sites
and two Early Bronze Age settlements are presented. The molecular and stable
isotope results are discussed in relation to zooarchaeological evidence.
Overall, the findings suggest that each community relied on either a hunting-
or a husbandry-based subsistence strategy dependent upon the ecosystem in
which they settled; horses and wild animals dominated subsistence in the
forest-steppe communities in contrast to ruminant husbandry in the steppe.
Part of Identifier:
ISSN (print): 2054-8923
Keywords:
Prehistoric North-Pontic region
animal exploitation
organic residues
carbon isotopes
DDC-Classification:
930 Geschichte des Altertums (bis ca. 499), Archäologie
Publication Type:
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Also published in:
STAR: Science & Technology of Archaeological Research 3 (2018), 1
URL of the Original Publication:
DOI of the Original Publication:
Journaltitle:
STAR: Science & Technology of Archaeological Research
Department/institution:
Erziehungswissenschaft und Psychologie
Institut für Prähistorische Archäologie
Comments:
Gefördert durch die DFG und den Open-Access-Publikationsfonds der Freien
Universität Berlin.