Abstract

The zooarchaeological research presented here investigates Neolithic and Chalcolithic (ca. 6500–5000 cal. BC) animal exploitation strategies at Uğurlu Höyük on the Turkish island of Gökçeada in the northeastern Aegean Sea. Toward this end, we first discuss the results of our analysis of the zooarchaeological assemblages from Uğurlu Höyük and then consider the data within a wider regional explanatory framework using a diachronic approach, comparing them with those from western and northwestern Anatolian sites. The first settlers of Gökçeada were farmers who introduced domestic sheep, goats, cattle and pigs to the island as early as 6500 years BC. Our results align well with recently published zooarchaeological data on the westward spread of domestic animals across Turkey and the Neolithization of southeast Europe. Using an island site as a case study, we independently confirm that the dispersal of early farming was a polynucleated and multidirectional phenomenon that did not sweep across the land, replace everything on its way, and deliver the same “Neolithic package” everywhere. Instead, this complex process generated a diversity of human-animal interactions. Thus, studying the dispersal of early farmers from southwest Asia into southeast Europe via Anatolia requires a rigorous methodological approach to develop a fine-resolution picture of the variability seen in human adaptations and dispersals within complex and rapidly changing environmental and cultural settings. For this, the whole spectrum of human-animal interactions must be fully documented for each sub-region of southwest Asia and the circum-Mediterranean.

Highlights

  • The zooarchaeological research presented here has addressed the following specific questions to probe animal exploitation strategies at Uğurlu and to add new data to research in the spread of domesticated animals across Neolithic western Anatolia: Fig 11

  • The Neolithic and Chalcolithic inhabitants of Gokceada exploited a wide range of taxa in varying proportions, remains of three principal food animals—sheep, goats, and cattle —dominate the three Uğurlu Hoyuk assemblages

  • Caprines in general and sheep in particular were the primary focus of pastoral economy throughout the cultural sequence

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Summary

Introduction

The revolutionary economic and social transformation of societies from foraging to farming in Southwest Asia shortly after 10,000 calibrated years BC (BC hereafter) and the subsequent spread of new genes, languages, ideologies, and domesticated cereals and livestock into Europe. Spread of domestic animals across Neolithic western Anatolia. 9674-15) (http://www.nationalgeographic.com/), to Levent Atici from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (http://www.unlv.edu), to Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch from the University of Georgia Uga.edu), to Burcin Erdoğu from the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism Gov.tr/?_dil=2) and the University of Thrace (BAP 2014-25) (http://www-en.trakya.edu.tr). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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