deralte: (horatio sea scape (by me))
deralte ([personal profile] deralte) wrote2004-11-12 06:16 pm
Entry tags:

Zooarchaeology

It's freezing cold out. I just got back from an extra lecture on the colour of animals in archaeology, done by my zooarchaeology professor, which is the only reason I attended. Now I have less then an hour before I have to decide if I want a cold walk to and from karate tonight for a seminar which I'm not at all sure about, or if I want to skip that and go to a flatwarming party, or stay home and watch the tele. Guess which one is winning.

Quotes from zooarchaeology professor:

On drawing animals - "Now I'll make a nice and graceful, tasty cow."

On drawing bulls - "This is a male. I indicate this with a horn and not something more pornographic."

On domestication - "Domesticity. That's the end of free love for domestic animals."
ext_12918: (archaeological humour...:) (by me))

[identity profile] deralte.livejournal.com 2004-11-12 10:53 am (UTC)(link)
We were discussing butchering marks in my earlier lecture actually. It's hard to tell if people were say, eating calve's feet if you don't have some butcher marks on those bones.

I would think with underwater archaeology due to the better preservation you might have a much higher chance of identifying an animal's colour than anywhere else.

Found some rat bones on one wreck that showed evidence of cannibalism.
Cool!

[identity profile] doolabug.livejournal.com 2004-11-12 11:03 am (UTC)(link)
well, there can be extraordinary preservation, and I've seen leather (like shoe soles) incredibly preserved. I don't know about fur, though - are there other ways to tell color? I can't think of any examples from a submerged context, but I'll look around. What about horses from the frozen Scythian tombs?
ext_12918: (mary rose history (by me))

[identity profile] deralte.livejournal.com 2004-11-12 02:02 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the examples he mentioned of land archaeology, where they were actually able to determine cattle/horse colour, was from a Celtic salt mine where I'm assuming the salt preserved samples of fur (he didn't give us many details), in much faded form. From what he was implying though, so long as you have a sample of the fur, you can get an idea of colour by examining it in a lab. I would think frozen horses would also give you an idea of their colour.

I'm trying to recall any sites I've heard of with fur being preserved underwater, but the only thing I can recall is the hair on bog bodies. (A little voice is telling me that there was some fur lining on some of the clothes from the Mary Rose, but I suspect it's wrong.) I'd be interested if you do find a site.

[identity profile] doolabug.livejournal.com 2004-11-12 09:12 pm (UTC)(link)
hmmm, looked through some of my books before I left work and all I could find re: fur on Mary Rose was wool. They apparently had quite alot of leather and horn and even ivory, but I couldn't find anything directly referencing fur. I brought the fur question up to some of my colleagues and they suggested that mummified Egyptian cats might have fur preserved. No one can think of any submerged sites, but I'll ask one of my profs, who worked quite a bit in Egypt and the Med, to see if she knows of anything there. I'm more familiar with New World stuff.

Fascinating.
*geeks out*