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  • News

    Showing 21 - 25 out of 456

    • The Mystery of Red Deer Cave – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      New insights emerge about the enigmatic archaic human remains found in a Chinese cave.
    • Deciphering the Minoans – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      A brilliant pioneering scholar is paving a path that may eventually help crack Linear A, the ancient script of the Minoan civilization.
    • The Lost Cities of Ethiopia – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      Archaeologists and scholars crack the code of the historic Fra Mauro map to find long lost medieval cities in Ethiopia.
    • Sheep and goat domestication in Neolithic Turkey – Popular Archeology - Popular Archaeology

      PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES—A study* finds multiple phases of sheep and goat domestication in a Neolithic settlement in Central Anatolia, Turkey. Southwest Asia is thought to be the site of sheep and goat domestication in the early Holocene epoch, but the methods and precise locations of domestication are unclear. Mary C. Stiner and colleagues analyzed the age and sex structures of goat and sheep remains in the zooarchaeological record of Aşıklı Höyük in Central Anatolia, Turkey. The Aşıklı Höyük Neolithic site spans around 1,000 years of continuous occupation beginning around 8400 BC, corresponding to the beginning of settled life in the region. The authors found that sheep and goat management and domestication proceeded through three phases. In the first phase, residents seasonally captured wild lambs and kids from surrounding highlands and raised them within the settlement prior to slaughter. In the second phase, residents carried out limited breeding within the settlement while continuing to recruit wild infants. The third phase displays evidence of large-scale herding with a reproductively viable captive population and a herding economy that harvested adult animals, in contrast to subsequent Neolithic practices. Transition between phases was gradual, but domestication likely altered labor organization, settlement layout, and waste accumulation in Aşıklı Höyük. According to the authors, the results suggest that sheep and goat domestication at this site was a local rather than an imported development.