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Evidence for early cat taming in Egypt
Authors:Veerle Linseele  Wim Van Neer  Stan Hendrickx
Institution:aCenter for Archaeological Sciences, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200E, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium;bRoyal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Rue Vautier 29, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium;cLaboratory of Comparative Anatomy and Biodiversity, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Ch. Deberiotstraat 32, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium;dProvinciale Hogeschool Limburg, Elfde Liniestraat 25, B-3500 Hasselt, Belgium
Abstract:The remains are described of a young small felid found in a Predynastic burial at Hierakonpolis, Upper Egypt. Osteometric and zoogeographical arguments indicate that the specimen, dated to around 3700 B.C. on the basis of the associated pottery, belongs to Felis silvestris. In the same cemetery several other animal species, both wild and domestic, have been found. The left humerus and right femur of the cat show healed fractures indicating that the animal had been held in captivity for at least 4–6 weeks prior to its burial. We believe that this pathology suggests early cat taming more convincingly than a buried cat recently reported from Neolithic Cyprus (7500 B.C.). Such taming events were probably part of the processes that eventually led to the domestication of Felis silvestris. However, the absence of the cat in Predynastic and Early Dynastic depictions and its rare attestation in the archaeozoological record indicates that domestic status had not yet been attained during those early periods. Other species that were also held in captivity by Ancient Egyptians probably never became domesticated because they had one or more characteristics that prevented it.
Keywords:Predynastic  Egypt  Hierakonpolis  Archaeozoology  Cat  Pathology  Domestication
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