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Themes in Old World Zooarchaeology: From the Mediterranean to the Atlantic [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 224 pages, aukštis x plotis: 280x216 mm, B/W
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789255341
  • ISBN-13: 9781789255348
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 224 pages, aukštis x plotis: 280x216 mm, B/W
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789255341
  • ISBN-13: 9781789255348
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Provides an overview of cutting-edge research in Old World zooarchaeology, covering a geographic area ranging from Western Asia to Western Europe.

This new collection of papers from leading experts provides an overview of cutting-edge research in Old World zooarchaeology. The research presented here spans various areas across Europe, Western Asia and North Africa &; from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Several chapters focus on Iberia, but the eastern Mediterranean and Britain are also featured.

Thematically, the book covers many of the research areas where zooarchaeology can provide a significant contribution. These include animal domestication, bone modifications, fishing, fowling, economic and social status, as well as adaptation and improvement. The investigation of these topics is carried out using a diversity of approaches, thus making the book also a useful compendium of traditional as well as more recently developed methodological applications. All contributions aim to present zooarchaeology as a discipline that studies animals to understand people, and their richly diversified past histories. This will be a valuable source of information not just for specialists, but also for general archaeologists and, potentially, also historians, palaeontologists and geographers, who have an interest for the research themes discussed in the book.

The book is dedicated to Simon Davis, who has been a genuine pioneer in the development of modern zooarchaeology. It presents hugely stimulating case studies from the core areas where Davis has worked in the course of his career.
List of Contributors
vii
1 From the Mediterranean to the Atlantic: Simon Davis' exceptional contribution to the world of zooarchaeology
1(12)
Umberto Albarella
Methods and theory in the zooarchaeology of the Old World
2 Taphonomy of carnivores: understanding archaeological small prey accumulations
13(16)
Luis Lloveras
3 Fish bone studies in Iberia: an overview of 40 years of research from the LAZ-UAM (Madrid)
29(12)
Arturo Morales Muniz
Laura Llorente Rodriguez
Eufrasia Rosello Izquierdo
4 On the use of micromammals for paleoenvironmental reconstruction: Qesem Cave as a case study
41(8)
Orr Comay
Tamar Dayan
5 Traditional sheep and goat husbandry in Cyprus: the effects of scale and its identification in archaeological assemblages
49(12)
Angelos Hadjikoumis
Early prehistory
6 Among hyenas: Nery Delgado, Albert Gaudry, Edouard Harle and the hyenas of Furninha cave (Portugal)
61(10)
Joao Luis Cardoso
7 Sheepish bones, sheepish dates, sheepish logic and the neolithization of Iberia
71(16)
Joao Zilhao
Late prehistory
8 Astragali and their archaeological contexts in the Iberian Peninsula. Significance, meanings and historical implications
87(8)
Ana Margarida Arruda
9 Origins of metallurgy in the southern Levant: microscopic examination of butchering marks on animal bones at Tell Yarmuth, Israel
95(14)
Haskel J. Greenfield
Annie Brown
Pierre de Miroschedji
10 The food chain at the palace of King Amenhotep III at Malqata (Egypt)
109(8)
Salima Ikram
11 Caprine husbandry at the Iron Age settlement of A Lanzada (Pontevedra, Spain)
117(12)
Marta Moreno-Garcia
Historic times
12 Cattle from the East, cattle from the West: diversity of Bos morphotypes in the Iberian Peninsula during late prehistoric and Roman times
129(16)
Ariadna Nieto-Espinet
Angela Trentacoste
Silvia Guimaraes
Silvia Valenzuela-Lamas
13 Animal remains from 17th-century Carnide, Lisbon, Portugal
145(16)
Cleia Detry
Ana Beatriz Santos
Tdnia Casimiro
Ana Caessa
Nuno Mota
14 The contribution of Islamic culture to the medieval faunistic redefinition of the Iberian Peninsula
161(12)
Marco Masseti
15 Hovering over hawking in Early medieval Iberia
173(16)
Laura Llorente Rodriguez
Arturo Morales Muniz
Leif Jonsson
Evelyne Browaeys
16 Launceston twenty-five years after: the zooarchaeology of Cornwall
189(30)
Polydora Baker
17 Fodder in the city: rye for animals in the 1755 earthquake in Lisbon
219
Joao Pedro Tereso
Lidia Fernandes
Umberto Albarella is a Professor of Zooarchaeology at the University of Sheffield (UK). His research focuses on various aspects of past human animal relationships and is mainly based in Italy and Britain. He is also interested in the relationship between archaeology, politics and social justice. Cleia Detry is a researcher at Uniarq, the Archaeology Research Unit of the School of Arts of the University of Lisbon. She has worked mainly on Portuguese zooarchaeological assemblages and has a long-standing collaboration with Simon Davis on osteometrics and animal improvement. She also contributes to the Masters in Archaeology at the University of Lisbon. Sónia Gabriel is a zooarchaeologist in charge of the Osteological Reference Collections of the Direcēćo Geral do Património Cultural (DGPC) (Laboratório de Arqueociźncias - LARC) in Lisbon. Her research is mainly based in Iberia and Morocco, and she has a particular expertise in fish bones. Catarina Ginja is the Principal Investigator of the Archaeogenetics group at CIBIO/InBIO-Research Centre in Biodiversity and Genetic at the University of Porto (Portugal). She is interested in understanding the origins, evolution and modes of improvement of domestic animals from the Iberian Peninsula. Ana Elisabete Pires is a biologist and researcher at CIBIO - InBIO Archaeogenetics Group (Portugal). Her main interest is in zooarchaeogenetics. Through the analyses of ancient DNA, she is committed to explore the evolutionary paths of the Iberian domestic animals, in particular the dog.