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Distinguishing offshore bird hunting from beach scavenging in archaeological contexts: The value of modern beach surveys

机译:在考古学背景下,将近海鸟类狩猎与海滩清理区分开来:现代海滩调查的价值

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Determining whether seabirds recovered from coastal shell middens were obtained via active hunting or scavenging of beached carcasses is a challenge for archaeologists. Traditional methods have included analyzing skeletal part frequencies, abundance, age profiles, and contextual evidence. The assumption has been made, based on limited biological data, that an assemblage of carcasses scavenged from the beach will have more wing elements, and fewer legs and heads. Few studies, however, have embraced modern beaching data to verify this assumption and assess the potential faunal resources available for scavenging. We analyze the skeletal part representation of modern beached birds observed by the Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team (COASST), comparing the COASST dataset to two idealized hypotheses used by archaeologists: the human scavenging hypothesis (wings only are recovered, while heads and legs are absent) and the human hunting hypothesis (all body parts are found in equal proportions). Finally, we apply these results to analysis of the bird remains from the Minard site (45-GH-15), a late Holocene coastal site in Grays Harbor, Washington. We find that contemporary beached bird data are closer to replicating the human hunting hypothesis as compared to the human scavenging hypothesis, as >75% of the 19,599 carcasses in the COASST dataset had a combination of head, wings and legs. This result, and the similarity in taxonomic distribution between our contemporary beached bird data and Minard assemblage, suggests that indigenous peoples may have used scavenging as a viable means of resource acquisition in the past. Use of contemporaneous beached bird data may provide zooarchaeology with a statistically defensible baseline of information on the phenology, abundance and condition of bird carcasses. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
机译:对于考古学家来说,确定是否通过主动狩猎或清除滩涂尸体是从沿海贝壳中部捕获海鸟是一个挑战。传统方法包括分析骨骼部位的频率,丰度,年龄分布和背景证据。根据有限的生物学数据做出的假设是,从海滩上捡拾的尸体组合将具有更多的机翼元素,并且腿和头也更少。但是,很少有研究采用现代的滩涂数据来验证这一假设并评估可用于清除的潜在动物资源。我们分析了沿海观察和海鸟调查小组(COASST)观测到的现代滩涂鸟类的骨骼部分表示,将COASST数据集与考古学家使用的两个理想化假设进行了比较:人类扫地假设(仅恢复翅膀,而头部和腿部被恢复)缺席)和人类狩猎假说(所有身体部位的比例均相等)。最后,我们将这些结果应用于Minard站点(45-GH-15)的鸟类残留分析,该站点是华盛顿州Grays Harbor的全新世晚期沿海站点。我们发现,与人类清除假说相比,当代海滩搁浅鸟类数据更接近于复制人类狩猎假说,因为COASST数据集中19599个car体中有> 75%具有头部,翅膀和腿的组合。这一结果以及我们当代滩涂鸟类数据和Minard组合在分类学分布上的相似性表明,过去土著人民可能已经将清除作为获取资源的可行手段。利用同期搁浅的鸟类数据可以为动物考古学提供有关鸟类尸体物候,丰度和状况的统计上可辩护的基线。 (C)2016 Elsevier Ltd.保留所有权利。

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