Abstract

Barry W. Baker and Brian S. Shaffer
Assumptions about Species: A Case Study of Tortoise Bones from SE Texas
Journal of Field Archaeology 26 (1999) 69--74

Identifying animal remains is the most basic aspect of zooarchaeological research; the accuracy of all subsequent interpretations hinges on this process. Recently, the zooarchaeological community reiterated the need for researchers to be explicit in reporting their identification methodology. We review this problem and provide an example from our own research showing the interpretation problems that can arise when such methods are not described in detail and how unwarranted assumptions can affect research.

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