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Collagen fingerprinting of archaeological bone and teeth remains from Domuztepe,South Eastern Turkey
Authors:Mike Buckley  Sarah Whitcher Kansa
Affiliation:(1) Manchester Interdisciplinary Biocentre, Faculty of Life Sciences, 131 Princess Street, Manchester, M1 7DN, UK;(2) BioArCh, Department of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, Heslington, York, YO10 5YW, UK;(3) The Alexandria Archive Institute, 125 El Verano Way, San Francisco, CA 94127, USA
Abstract:We applied a recently developed method of collagen peptide mass fingerprinting for taxonomic identification in faunal remains to 111 specimens from the Neolithic site of Domuztepe in southeastern Turkey. Advances on the published technique allow us to move beyond the key domesticated fauna (sheep, goat, pig and cattle) to include non-domesticates (deer and gazelle, as well as humans). As the animal economy of Domuztepe was dominated by domestic sheep and goats, a large number of the samples tested were morphologically indistinguishable sheep/goat remains. A number of samples represented elements that provide information on age (i.e., mandibles) or sex (pelvis); thus, this represents the first major study to attempt to improve kill-off profiles using collagen fingerprinting. We also show that the collagen extracted from dentine is equally amenable to the proposed methodology as bone collagen.
Keywords:
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