Showing posts with label Horses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horses. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 January 2023

Understanding the message behind Europe's Upper Palaeolithic cave art.

Prior to about 37 000 years ago, cave art in Europe consisted largely of patterns of hand-prints, rectangles, and dots. After this time, a wealth of engraved and painted images swept across the continent, depicting the Animals of the Late Pleistocene with a realism that still impresses modern artists. Almost all of these artworks depict large herbivorous Animals, thought to have been important food sources for hunters on the Eurasian Steppes. In most cases it is easily possible to tell what species is being depicted, and even what time of year the image was portraying. The paintings on the walls of the Lascaux Cave in southwest France show a sequence of rutting Animals which can be interpreted as an ethological calendar (calendar of Animal behaviour), and at other sites the presence of Cervids (Deer) with antlers, and the aggressive postures of these Animals, have been interpreted as depiction of a particular season.

However, this cave art does not just depict Animals, alongside these images are frequent abstract marks, mostly dots and lines, but including other shapes such as 'Y's. These marks are usually either directly adjacent to the Animal images, or actually overlie them, suggesting a strong connection between the two. Similar marks have been found carved onto bones, dating from the onset of the European Upper Palaeolithic (roughly equivalent to the African Middle Stone Age) onwards, and are generally thought to have had a recording function. It has been generally assumed that such marks are numeric, and probably recording periods of time, but their exact message has remained unclear. 

Previous studies have found that 66% of the Animal depictions in Upper Palaeolithic European cave art are associated with other symbols, although these vary in form, and probably convey a variety of messages. It is also likely, given the long chronological range and wide geographical area over which these symbols are found, that more than one form of symbolic recording is present. 

In a paper published in the Cambridge Archaeological Journal on 5 January 2023, independent researchers Bennett Bacon, Azadeh Khatiri, and James Palmer, together with Tony Freeth of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at University College LondonPaul Pettitt of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Durham, and Robert Kentridge of the Department of Psychology at the University of Durham and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research programme in Brain, Mind and Consciousness, focus on two clear and simple patterns found in many of these depictions: Animals found associated with rows of dots and/or lines (which are presumed to be functionally the same) and branching 'Y' symbols. 

These symbols are found throughout the European Upper Palaeolithic, although most common from the later portion of this period, possibly implying that they became more common over time. Bennet et al. consider the meaning of the Animal depictions to be unambiguous, but consider the lines, dots, and 'Y' symbols to be potentially interpretable, and related to the ethology of the Animals they are found close to. The basis for this assumption is that the dots and lines in these sequences represent numbers, and that the combination of numbers and recognisable Animals gives the basis for deciphering messages tens of thousands of years ago.

Examples of animal depictions associated with sequences of dots/lines. (a) Aurochs: Lascaux, late period; (b) Aurochs: La Pasiega, late; (c) Horse: Chauvet, late (we differ in opinion with the Chauvet team, for whom it would be early); (d) Horse: Mayenne-Sciences, early; (e) Red Deer: Lascaux, late; (f) Salmon: Abri du Poisson, early; (g) Salmon (?): Pindal, late; (h) Mammoth: Pindal, early. Bacon et al. (2022).

It is now generally accepted that the regular marks left by Upper Palaeolithic peoples represent a form of counting, and therefore the storage of information outside of the brain. The processing of numbers can be done in several ways; by subitisation, or simply recognising small groups of objects at a glance (e.g. six tins in a box), by cardinality, or counting objects (twenty sheep in a field), or by ordinality, being able to place objects within a sequence (the third house in a row). Experimentally these have been shown to be distinct skills, carried out in different parts of the brain, and children have been shown to develop these skills in order as they develop, starting with subitisation and progressing to ordinality. 

In 1991, Alexander Marshack suggested that the dots and lines seen in Upper Palaeolithic art were numbers, most likely representing periods of time. In his view, each dot or line was likely to represent a day, with the sequences of pictures they were associated with being lunar calendars. The lunar calendar theory failed to win many supporters within the academic community, but the concept of the representations as a simple way of recording events outside the mind did gain wider acceptance. 

The grouping of engraved marks on bones and antlers from the Upper Palaeolithic has led to the conclusion that these marks were being used to store information, and that this information was most likely numeric. This has in turn led to the suggestion by cognitive archaeologist Karenleigh Overmann  that once Humans had begun to collect numerical data, it was almost inevitable that they would apply this to time, and in particular the seasons, important phenomena in the lives of people so closely dependent on nature.

The sequences of dots and lines found adjacent to Palaeolithic Animal images fit the same criteria for representing numbers as the carvings on bones and antlers, and are consistently arranged in lines horizontal to the orientation of the Animal images (which are often on ceilings). These sequences vary in length, but appear to have been recording numbers using the additive principle, where an extra mark represents an increase by one (as in the Roman numerals, I, II, III; or the Chinese 一, 二, 三).

In the 1990s archaeologist Carole Fritz assembled a database of 90 symbols used on portable objects associated with the Late Palaeolithic Magdalenian Culture, collected from the Dordogne and Pyranees, and including linear marks, dashes, angular signs, arc shapes, broken lines, dots, various impact marks and combinations and repetitions thereof. These symbols were used consistently at sites associated with the Magdalenian Culture, with no discernible variations over space and time. Based upon this, Fritz concluded that these marks represented a method of storing information recognised across the Magdalenian Culture, although the exact meaning implied remained obscure.

Hunting appears to have been an important source of nutrition to Upper Palaeolithic peoples, with the most important prey species being Horses, Bovids, Cervids, Caprids, Proboscideans, Birds, and aquatic Animals. Modern populations of these Animals show strong seasonal patterns of behaviour, with cycles of mating and birthing, and seasonal migrations in the spring and autumn. During this seasonal cycle, many of these Animals shift between large and small groups, and are present on different parts of the landscape.

Zooarchaeological studies have revealed a similar seasonality in the behaviour of these Animals during the Pleistocene, and it seems likely that a knowledge of migration patterns and breeding cycles would have been key information to Upper Palaeolithic hunters dependent on these Animals for survival. As such, it is unsurprising that these Animals were a central preoccupation for these people, and that images of them dominate their art. Furthermore, at sites such as Lascaux Cave depict these Animals in such detail that their pelage, hair, antler growth, gregarious and aggressive behaviour and other indications of rutting can be used to show that their breeding behaviour was also of great interest. Many of the Animal images at Lascaux are associated with symbols; for example a row of swimming Stags, generally interpreted as an autumn migration scene, is accompanied by a row of seven red dots, while a mating scene with male and female Aurochs in their summer coat is marked with four black dots. At a scene from the slightly later Font de Gaume Cave two Reindeer stags are depicted with locked antlers, and marked with a set of eight dots.

Bacon et al. accept the premise that the sequences of dots and lines associated with the Upper Palaeolithic Animal images are saying something about the Animals in the images with which they are associated. Furthermore, they accept that these are abstract representations, rather than parts of the images, noting that several different taxa are consistently annotated with the same number of dots, but on different parts of their anatomies. Given this consistency, they also accept that the message conveyed by the dots is numerical in nature, being either cardinal or ordinal.

Working from this, they assume that the objective was to convey some form of useful numeric information about specific prey Animals to future readers. Given this, it seems unlikely that they were recording the number of Animals sighted, the time at which they were sighted, or even the number of Animals killed. It is likely, however, that they would have wanted to record information about migrations, times when Animals could be relied upon to form aggregations, and times when Animals were most vulnerable to attacks by hunters (i.e. mating and birthing). Working from these assumptions, Bacon et al. propose that the timing of such events is the most logical numerical information to have been juxtaposed with the Animal images.

If Upper Palaeolithic people were able to record numbers using the additive principle, then it is quite likely that the rows of dots or lines seen on their art represent amounts of time. Furthermore, the number of dots or lines associated with an Animal image is never particularly high (and never higher than thirteen), so if each dot or line represents a single unit of time, then that unit is almost certainly a lunar month, since this is one of the few units which would have been obvious to pre-agricultural people. Based upon this, Bacon et al. believe that the dots and lines present in Upper Palaeolithic images represent lunar months, presenting information about the behaviour of Animals on a seasonal calendar. 

If this is correct, then the calendar being used by these people must have had an established beginning; a time of year against which the tallies could be counted, giving the people using it a point to count from. Most historical calendars have their roots in astronomical observations, counting from the solstices and equinoxes. These give accurate dating systems usable by agriculturalists, but are difficult to observe, and likely to have been of limited use to Palaeolithic hunters. Rather, these people lived in a world dominated by meteorological events, and seasonal cycles in temperature and the behaviour of Plants and Animals. One seasonal event which Bacon et al. believe would have been hard for Palaeolithic peoples to miss would have been the annual spring thaw. This is widely referred to using the French term bonne saison by zooarchaeologists, marking a period when rivers unfroze, snow melted, and the world began to turn green. This would not have occurred everywhere at the same time, with spring coming several weeks earlier in southern Europe than in the north, but would have provided a useful starting point for a yearly calendar used by people needing to track the migrations and mating habits of Animals, but not exchange accurate date information with distant communities. 

One of the problems for peoples wanting to record time in the ancient world was that the solar year cannot be divided into an exact number of lunar months (there are approximately 12.37 lunar months in one solar year). This led to the development of a variety of complex calendars, with periodic adjustments being made to bring the solar and lunar cycles into alignment. None of this is likely to have mattered much to Upper Palaeolithic peoples counting from the bonne saison, who could have just counted the lunar months from each spring thaw into the depths of winter, when it would have become irrelevant. 

Bacon et al. therefore theorise that the sequences of dots and lines in Upper Palaeolithic art represent lunar months after the bonne saison. Therefore, if an Animal is represented along with a sequence of three dots, then the intent was to imply some important feature of that Animal's life cycle happened three months after the spring thaw. This is technically an interval calendar, recording that events happened a certain period after the bon saison, rather than a true calendar recording accurate dates.

Furthermore, Bacon et al. note that many of the sequences contain a 'Y' symbol in the midst of a series of dots or lines, which they believe represents a significant event in the life cycle of these Animals, and reason must be one of four possible annual occurrences, spring migration, mating, birthing, or autumn migration. 

The 'Y' symbol is one of the most commonly depicted symbols in Upper Palaeolithic art, and therefore presumably has an important meaning. Bacon et al. note that the position of this symbol within sequences varies between Animal taxa, but remains constant for each taxon, implying that it is carrying species specific data, and that that data appears to be ordinal in nature, within an ordinal sequence. Thus the total number of symbols potentially records one piece of information, with the position of the 'Y' symbol conveying a second. Bacon et al. further propose that, given the known biology of the Animals involved, the 'Y' symbol is most likely to represent birthing.

In order to test this hypothesis Bacon et al. compiled a database of Animal symbols with associated symbol sequences, and compared these to known data on the reproduction and migration of their modern relatives, and information about Pleistocene Animals established by previous zooarchaeological studies. Having eliminated any dubious or ambivalent sequences from the record, Bacon et al. were left with 256 sequences containing a 'Y' symbol and 606 sequences which did not.  The majority of these sequences came from France and Spain, although some came from further east. Chronologically, the images span the whole of the Late Upper Palaeolithic, although the majority come from the end of this period. 

Bacon et al. initially divided their data into two chronological sections, the Early and Middle Upper Palaeolithic Aurignacian and Gravettian cultures, and the Late Upper Palaeolithic Solutrian and Magdalenian cultures, but surprisingly no difference could be found between these datasets, suggesting that, contrary to expectations, the same data-recording system seems to have persisted in Europe for over 20 000 years. 

For the sake of convenience, Bacon et al. sorted some of the Animals depicted into groups, such as Cervids, Caprids, Birds, and Fish, while others were retained as separate species, i.e. Bison, Aurochs, Horses, Mammoths and Rhinos. Other species, such as Snakes and Wolverines, were present, but in very low numbers, and were excluded from the dataset, as were images of Humans.

In order to make the comparison, Bacon et al. converted the expected birthing season for the Animals into months relative to the Pleistocene bonne saison. Thus, assuming the bonne saison started around the start of May, the birthing season for European Bison, typically August, should be 3 or 4. Such a calendar is necessarily approximate, given that it is based upon seasonal events which might themselves vary from year to year, and will certainly vary regionally.

Bacon et al.'s prediction was that the 'Y' symbols related to each Animal group should be clustered, rather than randomly distributed throughout the sequences, and that these clusters should correspond to the predicted birthing seasons of the Animals, adjusted to an ordinal calendar rooted at the bonne saison. Since this should be different for the different groups, the position of the 'Y' symbol in the sequence should also vary between groups.

This prediction proved to be true for the majority of the groups, with the 'Y' symbol being both consistent and coinciding with the predicted birthing season for Aurochs, Bison, Horses, Fand Mammoths, and less clear but still matching the prediction for Cervids. Only Caprids failed to match the prediction, with no clear pattern observable in the data for this group. No correlation could be made between the position of the 'Y' symbols and the predicted times of mating or migration. However, the observed total number of marks correlated to the predicted mating season for Aurochs, Bison, Horses, Mammoths, and probably Cervids.

The two non-Mammalian groups, Birds and Fish, showed slightly different patterns, with the 'Y' correlating with mating and the end of the line with hatching for Birds, and the 'Y' correlating with the spring migration and the end of the line with hatching in Fish; in both cases the sequence relates to the appearance of a food source.

Bacon et al.'s data provides strong statistical evidence for a correlation between the position of a 'Y' symbol in a sequence associated with an image of an Animal, and the birthing season of that Animal, as calculated on an interval lunar calendar rooted in the Pleistocene bonne saison. It also provides weaker statistical support for the total number of marks representing the mating season of the same Animals. 

The idea of Upper Palaeolithic peoples in Europe using a form of numeric notation using notches, lines, and other marks has been accepted for some time, and is no longer really controversial. Based upon this, it has also been generally assumed that other marks used by these people were recording some form of information, although the exact nature of this information has, until now, remained unclear. 

Bacon et al. propose that the symbols associated with the (unambivalent) Animal images relates directly to the biology and behaviour of those Animals, providing a key to understanding the Upper Palaeolithic notation system. This is based on the assumption that the position of a particular mark, the 'Y' symbol, within a sequence of simpler marks (dots or lines), represents a key event in the life cycle of these organisms, in this instance the birthing season, something supported by a statistical analysis of the data.

This means that these Upper Palaeolithic people had a means of preserving information which could be read back after thousands of years, by people who might have quite different languages, but understood the common notation system (we know little of the languages spoken in the Upper Palaeolithic, but they are unlikely to have remained constant for tens of thousands of years). The widespread use of this system over long periods of time and a wide geographical area suggests that it was important to record this information in a way that went beyond oral traditions (although these are likely to have also been used).

The symbols represent more than a simple tally, and Bacon et al. propose that they represent the development of a simple calendar, based upon meteorological events and the biology of important prey Animals. This would predate by many thousands of years any previously known calendar or writing system.

It is far from clear how widely the interpretation of this data would have been understood in the communities which produced it. Objects, such as bones or antlers, with tallies on them are widely known from this period, and would presumably have been present in domestic environments, carried by members of the community. However, the cave art was typically placed in deep cave environments, where it was potentially not seen by the whole community, and may have been restricted to a small number of people.

Bacon et al. do not argue that their interpretation is exclusive of the artworks having had other purposes, aesthetic or ritual, nor do they claim to have unravelled all of the meaning behind the symbols (other symbols are present in the cave art, which they have not included in this study). Furthermore, they do not assert that this notation system was used by all peoples present in Europe throughout the Upper Palaeolithic, and acknowledge that there are plenty of instances of Upper Palaeolithic art in which Animals are depicted without the presence of additional symbols of any kind.

They do however, believe they have uncovered a method of storing data about the behaviour of important prey Animals, which was used in parts of western and central Europe for a period which lasted from about 37 000 years ago to about 13 000 years ago. In this interpretation, the individual images do not represent individual Animals, but are instead representative of entire species, and the behaviour of these species as experienced by the creators of the art. 

The rows of symbols and position of marks within them represent a simple syntax combining linear and ordinal numbers to record and communicate information, a form of intellectual abstraction, something which is considered to a key achievement of modern Humans (Upper Palaeolithic peoples are universally accepted as fully Modern Humans). This ability to record a combination of information derived the behaviour of Animals, number-based information, seasonal meteorology, and lunar months, therefore represents a significant intellectual achievement. This provided a system to preserve this information that went beyond oral tradition, and enabled the comparison of data from multiple years, presumably enabling the people who collected it to make estimations about variations in natural phenomena, something hard to do with purely oral records.

This raises the question of whether this system could genuinely be called writing. The system does seem to be able to deal with discrete quantities, i.e. using numbers to say something about the Animals they are associated with, rather than just counting the numbers. Furthermore, the use of placement to determine the value of the 'Y' symbol is a precursor of the use of place to show the value of a number (as in 1, 10, 100), something previously assumed to have been a Sumerian invention. It could even be considered that the 'Y' symbol represents a verb, 'to give birth', although this is less than clear, it could simply be a noun such as  'birth' or 'birthplace'.

The common modern use of the term language implies that it has a phonetic connection to a spoken language, generally that used by the writer. This is again thought to have originated in ancient Sumer, Mesopotamia, around 3300 BC, when a system comprising a mixture of pictograms and abstract numerical symbols first appeared. These system evolved into Cuneiform, which is considered to be a script rather than a language (in the sense that the modern English and French languages are written in Latin script). A form of record-keeping using small tokens is known to have been used in the Near East in the Neolithic, during the tenth millennium BC, with the system evolving over time and being widespread in the region by the sixth millennium BC. By the fourth millennium BC these tokens appeared to have taken other, non-numeric functions, something which evolved further into the Cuneiform script of Uruk-era Sumer. 

Bacon et al. postulate that the European Upper Palaeolithic system actually conveys more information than the first Mesopotamian scripts, in that in relates the behaviour of wild Animals to a meteorologically derived calendar, whereas the earliest Mesopotamian records appear to have just recorded quantities of items. Based upon this, they argue that this system can justifiably be called a script. However, they note that the system gives no indication as to how the people using it would have described the Animals depicted, the Moon or its phases, or the bonne saison, although they do assume that these people would have been able to describe all these things orally.

The European Upper Palaeolithic recording system appears to contain no grammatical syntax, which would justify its description as a true written language, but does seem to be recording data at least as well as the proto-Cuneiform script of ancient Sumer (although, unlike the Sumerian records, this system could not be described as 'administrative documents'). 

For this reason Bacon et al. do not press the claim that this system should be seen as a language (something they see as potentially controversial, and at best semantic), but a form of proto-writing forming a step between a simple tallying system and a true writing system. They are aware that this claim is likely to be contested, and that others in the field are likely to come up with other ideas about what this system should be called. 

For the time being they restrict themselves to describing the system as a form of proto-writing, conveying a phrenological/meteorological calendar, although they welcome debate on the subject. However this system should be described, it clearly represents a system of symbolic record-keeping dating from tens of thousands of years before the earliest Sumerian writing system, making it a highly significant discovery.

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Sunday, 19 September 2021

Production of dairy products drove the expansion of the Yamnaya peoples of the Eurasian Steppes in the Early Bronze Age.

The nomadic peoples of the Eurasian Steppes have long been a source of fascination to both archaeologists and the general public, with, sometimes less than flattering, fictionalised versions appearing in popular fantasy novels such as JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings and GRR Martin's Game of Thrones. The later phases of these groups, such as the Xiongnu and Mongol Empires are relatively familiar, but the origins of these groups in the Eneolithic (the Late Neolithic plus the Chalcolithic, or 'Copper Age') are rather more obscure. The archaeology of these groups has been studied for a long time, but new technologies have recently shed new light on the field. For example, it has been demonstrated that European populations had a significant influx of DNA from steppe-dwelling groups during the late Neolithic. The same Neolithic steppe populations (referred to as Yamnaya by archaeologists) also have also been shown to have genetic links to the Afanasievo people of the Altai Mountains and even the peoples of Mongolia. Both archaeological and genetic data suggest extensive population movements in this area during the Early Bronze Age (roughly 3300 to 2500 BC), with links being established between the Yamnaya peoples of the Pontic–Caspian steppe and the peoples of Siberia and Scandinavia.

Thus, it is understood that the Yamnaya peoples underwent a significant expansion of their geographical range during this period, but the drivers of this expansion are less certain. One popular explanation is that innovations such as the use of Horses and wagons enabled the rapid spread of a pastoralist lifestyle across large swaths of Eurasia, and that this, combined with the consumption of dairy products, made large areas of the Eurasian steppes previously unoccupiable open to Human habitation. However, while this model provides a plausible explanation for the successes of the Yamnaya peoples, it is not, at the current time, very well supported by the available evidence. There is archaeological evidence for the use of carts and bridles in the Eneolithic and Early Bronze Age, but not for the use of Horses or dairy products.

The story of Horse domestication has long been a controversial subject in archaeology. Horse remains are known from the Eneolithic of Botai in northern Kazakhstan, but these have recently been shown to have been Przewalski's (or Mongolian) Wild Horses, Equus przewalskii, not the modern domestic Horse, Equus caballus, a species which has not confidently been found in association with Humans at sites older than the Early Bronze Age, and which cannot be confidently asserted to have been used as a riding Animal or even a beast of burden, rather than something which was being hunted, at Early Bronze Age sites. It is currently thought that Horses were not ridden, or milked, on the Eastern European steppes before about 1200 BC, and they may not have been an Animal used much by the pastorialist peoples of the period at all. 

Data on the early consumption of milk is equally lacking. Isotopic studies of Human remains have been used to suggest that dairy products were being consumed, but cannot confirm this. Palaeoproteomics (the analysis of ancient sets of proteins) could potentially be used to identify dairy consumption, but so far has only been applied to a very limited number of sites on the Eurasian steppes. Studies of the Yamnaya and Afanasievo peoples have only, to date, shown evidence of dairy consumption among a few individuals from the Eastern Steppes, and was only able to give a very ambiguous result on the producer of the peptides (short amino acid chains, or fragments of proteins) found, which was probably a Sheep or Cow.

In a paper published in the journal Nature on 15 September 2021, a group of scientists led by Shevan Wilkin of the Department of Archaeology at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, and the Institute for Evolutionary Medicine at the University of Zürich, present the results of a study which examined palaeoproteonomic evidence from dental calculus from 56 Humans from across the Eurasian steppes, dated to between 4600 and 1700 BC.

Wilkin et al. collected data from 19 Eneolithic idividuals; six from Murzikha 2, nine from Khvalynsk 1 and Khvalynsk 2, one from Ekaterinovka Mys, one from Lebyazhinka 5, and two from Khlopkov Bugor. Studies of Ancient DNA obtained from Khvalynsk and othe Eneolithic burrials in this area of the the Volga and northern Caucasus, suggest that the local population was related to the Yamnaya Peoples, but lacked the input of genetic materials from Anatolian farmers seen in the later. 

Studies based upon archaeological evidence and stable isotope analysis have suggested this population had a diet based upon the gathering of local plants, fishing, and the consumption of domestic Animals. Wilkin et al. also extracted dental calculus from two individuals from Botai in northern Kazakhstan, a site dating to about 3500 BC, where faunal remains are dominated by domestic Horses, and proteins extracted from ceramics have suggested Horses were being milked.


Map showing sites that yielded individuals with preserved ancient proteins. (a) Eneolithic, (b) Early Bronze Age and (c) Middle–Late Bronze Age sites in the Pontic–Caspian region, showing the number of individuals with a positive dairy identification out of the total number of individuals with preserved ancient proteins for each site. Strong evidence of preservation of Equine or Ruminant milk protein identifiers are depicted with black Animal icons; the single individual with equivocally identified casein peptides is shown with a grey icon. Wilkin et al. (2021).

In addition, Wilkin et al. sampled 35 Bronze Age Humans from 20 sites. These include sixteen Early Bronze Age individuals; two from Krasikovskyi 1, one from Krasnokholm 3, two from Krivyanskiy 9, two from Kutuluk 1, one from Leshchevskoe 1, one from Lopatino 1, two from Mustayevo 5, one from Nizhnaya Pavlovka, one from Panitskoe, one from Podlesnoe, one from Pyatiletka, and one from Trudovoy; as well as fourteen individuals the Middle–Late Bronze Age transition; one from Bolshekaraganskyi, two from Kalinovsky 1, three from Kamennyi Ambar 5, one from Krasikovskyi I, three from Krivyanskiy 9, one each from Lopatino 1 and Lopatino 2, one from Potapovka 1, one from Shumayevo 2, and five from Utevka 6.

 
Maps of all sites and individuals included in this study from the (A) Eneolithic; (B) Early Bronze Age; and (C) Middle and Late Bronze Age. Wilkin et al. (2021).

Previous archaeological isotopic studies of Early Bronze Age Yamnaya sites have suggested a diet strongly focused on herd Animals, including Cattle, Sheep and Goats. Horse remains have also been found at Early Bronze Age Yamnaya sites, but whether these were domestic Animals or wild Horses hunted for their meat is unclear. The Middle–Late Bronze Age transition was marked by an increased use of Horse-based technologies, such as chariots, which clearly indicates these people were using domestic Horses.

Fifty five of the fifty six dental calculus samples tested yielded identifiable protein data, and forty eight of those produced strong enough signals of proteins commonly found in the oral cavity that they were included in the study. 

The nineteen oldest individuals examined, all dated to between 4600 and 4000 BC, came from five Eneolithic sites close to the Volga River, or tributaries of that river, in southwestern Russia. Of these nineteen, eleven yielded good enough data to be included in the final study, with ten showing no evidence for the consumption of dairy products. The remaining individual yielded to peptides associated with Bovine α-S1-casein milk curd protein, although Wilkin et al. do not take this as absolute proof of milk consumption, as the most common dairy protein, β-lactoglobulin, was not recovered. Neither of the Botai individuals returned any evidence for dairy consumption. 

Fifteen of the sixteen Early Bronze Age individuals included in the study yielded multiple Ruminant dairy peptides including β-lactoglobulin, with some also producing α-S1 casein, α-S2-casein or both. Many of these peptides were identifiable to genus level, with the most common genera being Ovis (Sheep), Capra (Goats), and Bos (Cattle, Buffalo, Bison, and Yaks, although presumably Cattle were the most likely milk-producers). Interestingly, two individuals, both from Krivyanskiy 9, on the southwestern fringe of the study area, yielded Equus (Horse, Donkey and Kiang, although only Horses would have been present in the study area) β-lactoglobulin. These individuals were estimated to have died between 3305 and 2633 BC.


Histogram of taxonomic specificity of dairy peptide spectral matches per individual. Histograms for individuals with evidence for consumption of dairy, from the Eneolithic (a), Early Bronze Age (b) and Middle and Late Bronze Age (c). PSM, peptide spectral match. Wilson et al. (2021).

Fifteen of the nineteen Middle–Late Bronze Age transition yielded positive evidence for the consumption of Bovine milk products, including peptides from β-lactoglobulin, α-S1-casein and α-S2-casein, and the whey protein α-lactalbumin. It was possible to identify some of these peptides as being Ovis or Bos, but both Capra and Equus were absent from the sample.

Wikin et al.'s results point to a clear shift towards milk consumption between the Eneolithic and Early Bronze Age, with 10 of 11 Eneolithic individuals showing no evidence of dairy consumption, whereas 15 of 16 Early Bronze Age individuals showed such evidence. A single Eneolithic individual, from Khvalynsk, showed possible evidence of dairy consumption, but this result cannot be taken with any confidence. This strongly suggests that the widespread adoption of dairy products as part of the Human diet was associated with the Eneolithic-Early Bronze Age transition on the Pontic–Caspian Steppe. This is in contrast to the situation to the west, where settled European farmers were clearly consuming dairy products in the Eneolithic. This in turn suggests a cultural frontier between the European farmers and the Steppe herders. 

The ability of proteonomics to identify the Animals producing the milk used for Human consumption sheds light on the Animals being kept by these peoples. The Pontic–Caspian Steppe provides a rich environment capable of supporting a range of herd Animals, including Cattle, with a relatively high water-demand, and Sheep and Goats, which favour more arid conditions. Interestingly, a recent study of Early Bronze Age individuals from the steppes suggests that the persistence of lactase (the enzyme that allows digestion of whole milk) production into adulthood in these individuals was rare, but this does not rule out the production of milk-derived products such as yogurts, cheeses or fermented milk beverages.

The milking of Horses has previously been suggested for the Botai culture of Kazakhstan, but Wilkin et al. found no evidence of this (although their sample size, two individuals, was quite small). Horse milk was apparently consumed by two individuals from the Early Bronze Age of the Pontic–Caspian Steppe. These findings, combined with the discovery that the Horses of Botai were not the Domestic Horse, Equus caballus, supports the idea that Horse domestication originated on the Pontic-Caspian Steppe rather than with the peoples of Central Asia. The oldest Horse remains shown to contain genetic markers for modern domestic lineages date from between 2074 and 1625, and come from sites in Russia, Romania and Georgia. The discovery of the oldest known evidence in the Pontic-Caspian Steppe region, which also saw the first appearance of Horse-drawn chariots around 2000 BC, contributes further evidence to this hypothesis.

Wilkin et al.'s findings contribute to the growing understanding of a significant cultural and technological revolution associated with the Eneolithic-Early Bronze Age transition on the Pontic-Caspian Steppe. As well as the, obvious, adoption of bronze as a metal for making tools and weapons, this shift included the abandonment of riverine settlement sites, the appearance of kurgan cemeteries on formerly uninhabited arid plateaus, the appearance of wheeled vehicles, and the occasional placement of Horse bones in Yamnaya burials. This was accompanied by a rapid expansion of the range of these peoples, both to the west into Europe and to the east into the Altai Mountains. Wilkin et al.'s findings shed no direct light upon the role of Horses in this expansion, but evidence for the consumption of Horse milk is clearly evidence for Horse domestication, which is likely to also imply Horses were being used for other purposes. The combination of a dietsry shift to include nutritionally rich dairy products, the adoption of Animal-drawn vehicles as a means to transport greated loads, and the domestication of highly versatile Horses is likely to have significantly transformed the cultural and economic environment of the Pontic-Caspian Steppe, enabling Humans to venture into previously uninhabitable areas, and thereby access further new resources, such as seasonally snow-covered upland pastures. It is, of course, possible that all of these elements were present to some extent before the Eneolithic-Early Bronze Age transition, but that transition clearly shows the widespread adoption of all these technologies by populations over a wide geographical area.

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Sunday, 12 January 2020

Four Horses dead in Equine Herpes outbreak in the New Forest, England.

Four Horses have now died in an outbreak of Equine Herpes Virus at a dressage and showjumping centre in the New Forest, England this week. The first cases were reported at the Crofton Manor Equestrian Centre, near Stubbington in Hampshire, on Tuesday 7 January 2020, after a Horse fell ill at the beginning of the month. The centre has now been placed under quarantine, as have several other sites in Hampshire, Sussex, and Kent, which have had Horses visit Cofton Manor since December 2019.

Crofton Manor Equestrian Centre, near Stubbington in Hampshire, where Horses are under quarantine following an outbreak of Equine Herpes Virus. BBC News.

Equine Herpes Virus is a form of Herpesvirales, the group which also includes the Human Herpes Virus, as well as a range of other Viruses infecting Humans, Mammals, Birds, Turtles, Amphibians, Bony Fish, and Molluscs. There are at least two strains of Equine Herpes Virus, with the more common one being relatively benign and causing only minor symptoms, if any symptoms at all, but the other is prone to causing spontaneous abortions and sometimes lethal brain infections. The Herpesvirales are double-stranded DNA Viruses, with isohedral capsids (protein shells), a group that also includes the Smallpox and Swine Fever Viruses.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2020/01/dolphin-found-dead-on-beach-in-dorset.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/11/determining-origin-of-southern-inner.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/09/diplocynodon-hantoniensis-alligatoroid.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/09/african-swine-fever-reported-in-south.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/09/magnitude-11-earthquake-in-surrey.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/08/cycas-revoluta-cycads-flowering-on-isle.html
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Thursday, 15 October 2015

A preserved Horse-foetus from the Middle Eocene Messel Shale.


Mammals have dominated almost all terrestrial ecosystems for the last 65 million years, however fossil Mammals, while not uncommon, are generally somewhat fragmentary, typically consisting of bone fragments and teeth, with larger more intact skeletons forming less than 2% of all know Mammal remains, and the preservation of other tissues even rarer. One location that does frequently produce more intact Mammal specimens is the early Middle Eocene Messel Shale of southern Germany, where a large number of Mammal specimens show exceptional preservation. Among the many remarkable fossils from the Messel Shale have been found a large number of specimens of the early Horse, Eurohippus messelensis, including a total of thirteen described examples of female Horses with preserved foetuses within their body cavities.

In a paper published in the journal PLoS One on 7 October 2015, Jens Lorenz Franzen of the Department Messelforschung at the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut Frankfurt and the Department Geowissenschaften at the Naturhistorisches Museum Basel, Christine Aurich of the Department Universitätsklinik für Kleintiere und Pferde at the Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien and Jörg Habersetzer, also of the Department Messelforschung at the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut Frankfurt, describe a new specimen of Eurohippus messelensis, also showing the presence of a preserved foetus.

Skeleton of a mare of Eurohippus messelensis with foetus (white ellipse). The specimen was discovered and excavated by a team of the Senckenberg Research Institute Frankfurt at the Grube Messel, shoulder height ca. 30 cm, scale = 10 cm. Sven Tränkner in Franzen et al. (2015).

The new specimen is about 2 million years older than any previously described example, but is nevertheless considered to be the best preserved. It comprises a partially disarticulated post-cranial skeleton and crushed and disarticulated cranium, encased within what appears to be the preserved uterus of the adult, only the second such specimen to preserve traces of the adult reproductive tract as well as the more obvious bones of the foetus.

The foetus analyzed in detail by high-resolution micro-x-ray. Bones of the mare are indicated by black lettering, bones and teeth of the foetus by white lettering. L2-7 = lumbar vertebrae 2–7 of the mare. Scale = 10 cm. Jens Lorenz Franzen & Jörg Habersetzer in Franzen et al. (2015).

The reproductive biology of extinct animals is notoriously hard to interpret. In Mammals length of gestation is more closely tied to size than to phylogeny, however this is still only a rough guide, for example modern Horses carry their foals for about eleven months, compared to about nine months for Cows, which are approximately the same size. The modern Blue Duiker, Philantomba monticola, a small Antelope from the rainforests of Central and Southern Africa, is generally considered an approximate ecological equivalent for Eurohippus messelensis, being approximately the same size and living in a similar environment, and typically carry their young for between 201 and 213 days, giving birth to one offspring per year. The high proportion of pregnant female Eurohippus messelensis recovered from the Messel Shale suggests a similar lifestyle, with females pregnant for much of the time, but only carrying one foal per year.

Identification of the broad ligament (ligamentumlatum uteri). (a) The broad ligament in the fossil mare from the Grube Messel. Sacrum and lumbar vertebrae (L6-7) belong to the mare. Not to scale(b) Position and morphology of the broad ligament (ligamentum latum uteri) attaching the uterine horn containing the fetus to the lumbar vertebrae and the pelvis of a modern horse. Jörg Habersetzer in Franzen et al. (2015).

See also…

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