Mesolithic domestic sheep in West Mediterranean Europe |
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Authors: | David S. Geddes |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centre d''Anthropologie des Sociétés Rurales, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 56, rue du Taur, 31000 Toulouse, France |
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Abstract: | Domestic ovicaprine specimens, some attributed specifically to Ovis aries L., have been recovered at two Mesolithic sites in the western Languedoc region of France, and two sites in southeastern France. The sites are typical late Mesolithic occupations, firmly dated between 7300 BP and 8000 BP, and stratigraphically precede the appearance of other domestic animals, cultivated plants, pottery, and the establishment of settled villages in their regions. They seem to represent early steps in the adoption of animal husbandry by hunter-gatherer societies in the western Mediterranean. Evidence from the Aude valley sites is presented for the gradual development of animal herding over a period of 1000 years or more, which spans the Mesolithic-Neolithic boundary. The evidence suggests that indigenous Mesolithic societies may have played a formative role in the development of settled farming communities in this area, and that the availability of domestic species may not have led rapidly to major changes in settlement, economy and society. |
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Keywords: | sheep mesolithic neolithic Europe France herding |
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