TY - JOUR
T1 - Sheep and goat management in the Early Neolithic in the Zagros region (8000–5000 BC)
T2 - New zooarchaeological and isotopic evidence from Ganj Dareh, Bestansur and Jarmo
AU - de Groene, Donna
AU - Bendrey, Robin
AU - Müldner, Gundula
AU - Coogan, Alex
AU - Matthews, Roger
N1 - Funding Information:
This project received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement ERC AdG 787264), 2018-2024, for the project MENTICA Middle East Neolithic Transition: Integrated Community Approaches. The project operates under a permit issued by the Sulaimaniyah and Erbil Directorates of Antiquities and Heritage, with agreement from the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, Baghdad. We are extremely grateful to all our colleagues at Sulaimaniyah Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage. We would like to thank Dr Melinda Zeder and Esther Rimer (Smithsonian National Museum for Natural history, Washington DC) for their assistance in sampling the Ganj Dareh specimens. Additionally, we are grateful to Dr Zeder for her advice on this article. We would like to thank Dr William Simpson, Dr Ken Angielczyk and Adrienne Stroup (Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago) for permission to sample the Jarmo finds and their assistance. Many thanks to Fengjuan Xiao and Dr Delphine Fremondeau for their help with the isotopic analysis.Thanks to Professor Aleks Pluskowski and Dr Kate Dudgeon for proofreading the document and their suggestions. Thanks to Dr Wendy Matthews and Professor Louise Martin for their final suggestions.
Funding Information:
This project received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement ERC AdG 787264), 2018-2024, for the project MENTICA Middle East Neolithic Transition: Integrated Community Approaches. The project operates under a permit issued by the Sulaimaniyah and Erbil Directorates of Antiquities and Heritage, with agreement from the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, Baghdad. We are extremely grateful to all our colleagues at Sulaimaniyah Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage. We would like to thank Dr Melinda Zeder and Esther Rimer (Smithsonian National Museum for Natural history, Washington DC) for their assistance in sampling the Ganj Dareh specimens. Additionally, we are grateful to Dr Zeder for her advice on this article. We would like to thank Dr William Simpson, Dr Ken Angielczyk and Adrienne Stroup (Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago) for permission to sample the Jarmo finds and their assistance. Many thanks to Fengjuan Xiao and Dr Delphine Fremondeau for their help with the isotopic analysis.Thanks to Professor Aleks Pluskowski and Dr Kate Dudgeon for proofreading the document and their suggestions. Thanks to Dr Wendy Matthews and Professor Louise Martin for their final suggestions.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s)
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - The transition from hunter gathering to farming is one of the most important episodes in the history of humankind. Considerable evidence indicates that this shift was a slow, complex, highly localized process, which took place in multiple places in Southwest Asia independently, from around 9500 BC. Caprines were arguably the first domesticated livestock, brought under human control during a process that began in the 9th millennium BC in a region extending from south-eastern Turkey to north-western Iran. In this research we integrate zooarchaeological analysis with stable isotopic data of faunal remains from three key Early Neolithic sites in the Eastern Fertile Crescent: Ganj Dareh (ca. 8000 BC), Bestansur (ca. 7800–7000 BC) and Jarmo (ca. 7000–5000 BC).While some form of goat management seemed to have been practiced at Bestansur, based on spherulites, dung and shed deciduous teeth, no evidence has been found for winter foddering or transhumance practices. At Ganj Dareh goat were managed, and might have been foddered during the winter or vertical transhumance might have taken place. At Pottery Neolithic Jarmo both sheep and goat were managed and they were possibly brought to higher elevations during the summer months or foddered during winter. This research has supported the idea that already during early stages of goat management, humans kept a high degree of control over the population.
AB - The transition from hunter gathering to farming is one of the most important episodes in the history of humankind. Considerable evidence indicates that this shift was a slow, complex, highly localized process, which took place in multiple places in Southwest Asia independently, from around 9500 BC. Caprines were arguably the first domesticated livestock, brought under human control during a process that began in the 9th millennium BC in a region extending from south-eastern Turkey to north-western Iran. In this research we integrate zooarchaeological analysis with stable isotopic data of faunal remains from three key Early Neolithic sites in the Eastern Fertile Crescent: Ganj Dareh (ca. 8000 BC), Bestansur (ca. 7800–7000 BC) and Jarmo (ca. 7000–5000 BC).While some form of goat management seemed to have been practiced at Bestansur, based on spherulites, dung and shed deciduous teeth, no evidence has been found for winter foddering or transhumance practices. At Ganj Dareh goat were managed, and might have been foddered during the winter or vertical transhumance might have taken place. At Pottery Neolithic Jarmo both sheep and goat were managed and they were possibly brought to higher elevations during the summer months or foddered during winter. This research has supported the idea that already during early stages of goat management, humans kept a high degree of control over the population.
KW - Neolithic
KW - Eastern Fertile Crescent
KW - sheep domestication
KW - goat domestication
KW - human-animal relationships
KW - stable isotope analysis
U2 - 10.1016/j.jasrep.2023.103936
DO - 10.1016/j.jasrep.2023.103936
M3 - Article
SN - 2352-409X
VL - 49
JO - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
JF - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
M1 - 103936
ER -