| Welcome to Natural Hazards Forum. We hope you enjoy your visit. You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free. Join our community! If you're already a member please log in to your account to access all of our features: |
| Stone age hunters brought home the bacon: study | |
|---|---|
| Tweet Topic Started: 28 Aug 2013, 12:54 AM (43 Views) | |
| skibboy | 28 Aug 2013, 12:54 AM Post #1 |
|
27 AUGUST 2013 Stone age hunters brought home the bacon: study ![]() Two Meishan pigs stand in their enclosure in the zoo Tierpark in Berlin, Germany on June 28, 2013. AFP - Stone Age hunter-gatherers in Europe may have been trading with settled farmers as long as 7,000 years ago -- acquiring pigs to supplement their hauls of wild boar, scientists said Tuesday. A study in the journal Nature Communications claims to provide the first evidence of live animal trade between the indigenous, nomadic Ertebolle hunters of northern Europe and more advanced, settled farmers who originally came from the Fertile Crescent -- today's Turkey, Syria and Iraq. "Hunters and farmers were not only acquainted with each other but even traded live animals," said a statement from Germany's Kiel University, which contributed to the study. Hunter-gatherers and farmers co-existed in northern Europe from about 5,500 to 4,200 BC. The hunter-gatherers lived off seals and wild boar on the western Baltic coast, while the farmers cultivated crops and livestock south of the Elbe River that runs through central Europe. The two groups are believed to have made sporadic contact, as suggested by excavated axes and pottery resembling those of the farmers at hunter-gatherer settlements, but the nature and extent of the exchanges remain a mystery. There has been no previous evidence that the hunters had access to any domestic animals other than dogs. For the new study, a team analysed DNA from pig remains unearthed at different Ertebolle settlements. They found the swine had maternal ancestors from the Middle East, like the domestic pigs of their farmer neighbours across the river. "Members of the Mesolithic (middle Stone Age) Ertebolle culture already had domestic pigs as early as 4,600 BC, although they were -- as hunters and gatherers -- not yet familiar with animal husbandry," said the statement. "Ertebolle hunter-gatherers acquired domestic pigs of varying size and coat colour," added the study. Some of the Ertebolle pigs had a light-coloured coat with black spots -- a typical feature of domesticated swine and completely different to the inconspicuous grey coat of the wild boar they would have been more familiar with. The researchers concluded that the two groups likely traded with one another, though they could not rule out livestock theft as a possible explanation. "Although it is unclear why the Ertebolle sought domestic pigs, both large and small pigs with multi-coloured coats would likely have seemed strange and exotic compared with the more familiar appearance of the locally available wild boar they traditionally hunted," the team reported. Their acquaintance with domestic pigs did not immediately revolutionise the hunter-gatherer lifestyle, however. The Ertebolle continued hunting wild prey for hundreds of years after they started raising a few domestic pigs, before finally settling down to farm full-time. The study also showed that domestic pigs were present in the region some 500 years earlier than previously thought. Source:
|
![]() |
|
| 1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous) | |
| « Previous Topic · Science & Nature · Next Topic » |








8:32 PM Jul 11