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An Ethnoarchaeological Case Study of Dung Fungal Spore and Faecal Spherulite Taphonomy in a Pastoral Cave Deposit
Authors:Lionello F Morandi
Institution:1. Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, Reading, UKl.morandi@reading.ac.ukORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-8840-6096
Abstract:ABSTRACT

In alkaline cave sediments, the presence of faecal spherulites is regarded as a reliable indicator of animal dung. Spores of coprophilous fungi are nowadays frequently employed as grazing indicators in palaeoecological sequences, but their use in dryland pastoral deposits is not routine in geoarchaeological practice. The paper assesses the relationship between the occurrence of spherulites and dung fungal spores from an abandoned rock shelter used as a stable for several decades. A clear match between these proxies is shown, and their distribution across the sediments is discussed, highlighting the potential of coprophilous spore analysis from archaeological stabling deposits, alongside other established dung indicators. The abundance of other microfossils (parasite eggs, coccolith plates and freshwater indicators) is also quantified and discussed.
Keywords:Pastoral deposits  dung  non-pollen palynomorphs  coprophilous fungi  faecal spherulites  parasite eggs
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