Abstract
Benjamin S. Arbuckle
Revisiting Neolithic Caprine Exploitation at Suberde, Turkey
Journal of Field Archaeology 33 (2008) 219--236
This paper addresses the nature of sheep and goat exploitation at the
Aceramic Neolithic site of Suberde, Turkey. Although previously
interpreted as a Neolithic huntersŐ village, new demographic and
measurement data indicate that the sheep and probably goats at Suberde
represent the earliest appearance of managed populations in the
Beysehir region of central Anatolia. Kill-off data indicate that the
caprines were carefully selected for slaughter within a narrow age
range, while measurement data provide evidence for size diminution, a
feature commonly seen in domestic populations. There is no evidence,
however, to indicate that caprine management included the intensive
culling of young males, a feature which is often considered to be
characteristic of herding economies. This divergence from the
expectations of various ethnographic models of pastoral management may
represent highly localized "experimental" caprine management strategies
in the earliest Neolithic settlements of central Anatolia.
Volume 33 Number 2 (Summer 2008)
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