The Archaeology of Pig Domestication in Eurasia

被引:0
|
作者
Max Price
Hitomi Hongo
机构
[1] Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Department of Materials Science and Engineering
[2] University of Kiel,Institute for Pre
[3] Graduate University for Advanced Studies, and Protohistoric Archaeology
来源
Journal of Archaeological Research | 2020年 / 28卷
关键词
Pigs; Domestication; Neolithic; Holocene; Zooarchaeology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The multifaceted behavioral and ecological flexibility of pigs and wild boar (Sus scrofa) makes study of their domestication both complex and of broad anthropological significance. While recognizing contextual contingency, we propose several “pathways” to pig domestication. We also highlight the diversity of pig management practices. This diversity complicates zooarchaeological detection of management techniques employed by humans in the early steps of domestication, and we stress the need for multiple lines of evidence. Drawing together the evidence, we review early Holocene human–Sus relations in Japan, Cyprus, northern Mesopotamia, and China. Independent pig domestication occurred in northern Mesopotamia by c. 7500 cal. BC and China by c. 6000 cal. BC. In northern Mesopotamia pig domestication followed a combined “commensal and prey” pathway that evolved into loose “extensive” husbandry that persisted as the dominant form of pig management for several millennia. There are not yet enough zooarchaeological data to speculate on the early stages of pig domestication in China, but once that process began, it involved more intensive management (relying on pens and fodder), leading to more rapid selection for phenotypes associated with domestication. Finally, pig domestication “failed” to take off in Japan. We suggest this was related to a number of factors including the lack of domestic crops and, potentially, cultural barriers to conceiving animals as property.
引用
收藏
页码:557 / 615
页数:58
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] THE ETHNOHISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF NORTHERN EURASIA Irkutsk, 19-25 May 2007
    Anderson, David G.
    ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY, 2007, 23 (04) : 26 - 27
  • [42] A biometric re-evaluation of recent claims for Early Upper Palaeolithic wolf domestication in Eurasia
    Boudadi-Maligne, Myriam
    Escarguel, Gilles
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2014, 45 : 80 - 89
  • [43] Insights into early pig domestication provided by ancient DNA analysis
    Amke Caliebe
    Almut Nebel
    Cheryl Makarewicz
    Michael Krawczak
    Ben Krause-Kyora
    Scientific Reports, 7
  • [44] The Southern Levantine pig from domestication to Romanization: A biometrical approach
    Price, Max D.
    Perry-Gal, Lee
    Reshef, Hagar
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2023, 157
  • [45] Insights into early pig domestication provided by ancient DNA analysis
    Caliebe, Amke
    Nebel, Almut
    Makarewicz, Cheryl
    Krawczak, Michael
    Krause-Kyora, Ben
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [46] Pig Domestication Processes: An Analysis of Varieties of Household Pig Reproduction Control in a Hillside Village in Northern Thailand
    Shinsuke Nakai
    Human Ecology, 2012, 40 : 145 - 152
  • [47] Pig Domestication Processes: An Analysis of Varieties of Household Pig Reproduction Control in a Hillside Village in Northern Thailand
    Nakai, Shinsuke
    HUMAN ECOLOGY, 2012, 40 (01) : 145 - 152
  • [48] Persistent foragers: New insights into Holocene hunter-gatherer archaeology in northern Eurasia
    Jordan, Peter
    Weber, Andrzej
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2016, 419 : 1 - 4
  • [49] FROM WILD HORSES TO DOMESTIC HORSES - STUDIES ON PHYLOGENY OF PLCENE EQUIDAE OF EURASIA AND PROBLEM OF DOMESTICATION OF HORSES
    BOKONYI, S
    AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, 1973, 75 (02) : 508 - 509
  • [50] Artificial selection drives differential gene expression during pig domestication
    Yang Yang
    Chaorui Liu
    Adeniyi C.Adeola
    Xierzhatijiang Sulaiman
    Hai-Bing Xie
    Ya-Ping Zhang
    Journal of Genetics and Genomics, 2019, 46 (02) : 97 - 100