Abstract

Late Neolithic Vinča communities, spread over much of central and northern Balkans during the late sixth to mid-fifth millennium BC and characterised by unusually large and densely population centres, would have required highly organised food production systems. Zooarchaeological analysis indicates that domesticate livestock were herded, but little is known about the seasonal husbandry practices that helped ensure a steady supply of animal products to Vinča farming communities. Here, we present new stable carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) isotopic measurements of incremental bioapatite samples from the teeth of domesticated livestock and wild herbivore teeth from two late Neolithic Vinča culture sites: Vinča-Belo brdo and Stubline (Serbia). Our results show a low variation overall within sheep and goats in terms of pasture type that may have been composed of seasonal halophyte plant communities, which have higher δ13C values due to the saline rich growing environments. Cattle feeding strategies were more variable and provided with supplementary forage, such as cut branches or leafy hay, during winter. The sharp distinction in the management of cattle and sheep/goat may be associated with the development of herding strategies that sought to balance livestock feeding behaviours with available forage or, more provocatively, the emergence of household-based control over cattle–an animal that held a central economic and symbolic role in Vinča societies.

Highlights

  • During the Late Neolithic (5300/5200 to 4600/4500 cal BC), much of the central Balkans and southeast parts of the Vojvodina and Transylvania regions were occupied by Vinča communities which produced dark burnished ceramics and figurines often bearing unique triangular

  • As part of this study and Gillis, Bulatović [22], we have focused on faunal material recovered from assemblages that date to the terminal phase of Vinča culture, i.e. Vinčа D/Vinča–Pločnik II phase

  • Details of the sampling protocol for wild and domesticated faunal bones for stable isotopic analysis of bone collagen are outlined in Gillis, Bulatović [22]

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Summary

Methods

All animal bone and teeth from Vinča-Belo brdo and Stubline were sampled by REG, assisted by JB and KP, with the permission of the local authorities and excavators (MS, NT). The collections are housed in City Museum, Belgrade. Details of the sampling protocol for wild and domesticated faunal bones for stable isotopic analysis of bone collagen are outlined in Gillis, Bulatović [22]. The complete sample list is provided in S1 Table. The Vinča-Belo brdo herbivore tooth specimens were recovered from archaeological features (e.g., pit-holes, demolition layers) and cultural layers dated to the latest occupation phase Specimens from Stubline were from archaeological features (e.g. waste pits, ditches) and cultural layers dated to the Vinča D period

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