Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences

Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences

Animal remains of Alaybeyi Höyük

Yazarlar: Abu Bakar SIDDIQ

Cilt 43 , Sayı 6 , 2019 , Sayfalar 767 - 783

Konular:-

Anahtar Kelimeler:Zooarchaeology,Alaybeyi Höyük,Animal remains,East Anatolia,Turkey

Özet: This paper presents the zooarchaeological observations on animal remains of Alaybeyi Höyük unearthed from 2016 and 2017 excavation sessions. Dated to 4721-4553 cal. BC, Alaybeyi stands so far as the oldest archaeological settlement discovered in northeast Anatolia. Therefore, the faunal assemblage at Alaybeyi offers great opportunity to study the status of animals and their relationships with humans in the largely unexplored Kars-Erzurum plateau covering a period from the Chalcolithic to Late Iron Age. Taxonomic and osteometric analyses show that, like the present day, cattle were dominant over caprines, revealing extensive cattle pastoralism in the region for at least about 7 millennia. While caprines too were significant in the subsistence strategy of local humans, there was not any sign of raising pigs. Significant numbers of wild species including carnivores, aquatic mammals, and rodents, as well as resident and migratory birds, were also hunted by Alaybeyi people. Additionally, horse burials, horse cult, dog burials, and a rich number of dog bones present animals as versatile actors in various ritual and symbolic practices at the site.


ATIFLAR
Atıf Yapan Eserler
Henüz Atıf Yapılmamıştır

KAYNAK GÖSTER
BibTex
KOPYALA
@article{2019, title={Animal remains of Alaybeyi Höyük}, volume={43}, number={6}, publisher={Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences}, author={Abu Bakar SIDDIQ}, year={2019}, pages={767–783} }
APA
KOPYALA
Abu Bakar SIDDIQ. (2019). Animal remains of Alaybeyi Höyük (Vol. 43, pp. 767–783). Vol. 43, pp. 767–783. Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences.
MLA
KOPYALA
Abu Bakar SIDDIQ. Animal Remains of Alaybeyi Höyük. no. 6, Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, 2019, pp. 767–83.