Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site
To study the early stages of wolf domestication, we investigated the remains of large canids from the Yana site. Morphologically they cannot be called dogs, but there are certain indicators of the wolves' relationship with people, favorable to the start of domestication. The sample is dominated...
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ftneicon:oai:rour.neicon.ru:rour/258103 2023-05-15T14:59:24+02:00 Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site Nikolskiy P.A. Sotnikova M.V. Nikol'skii A.A. Pitulko V.V. 2020-03-03T14:44:47Z https://openrepository.ru/article?id=258103 RU rus High Anthropological School University https://openrepository.ru/article?id=258103 open access Stratum Plus Arctic Siberia Behavior Commensalism Dog Domestication Neoteny Palaeolithic Totemism Wolf Yana site Article 2020 ftneicon 2020-07-21T12:22:06Z To study the early stages of wolf domestication, we investigated the remains of large canids from the Yana site. Morphologically they cannot be called dogs, but there are certain indicators of the wolves' relationship with people, favorable to the start of domestication. The sample is dominated by animals with worn, partially missing teeth and various bone pathologies. Often these animals are medium-sized. One skull of a nearly adult individual demonstrates juvenile characteristics. The morphologic and morphometric anomalies observed can be explained by commensalism (deficient and young animals using the resources of human settlement as an alternative food source). On the other hand, pathologies could have been an indirect result of commensalism, rather than its cause. Due to the risk of conflict with humans, only the most tolerant animals could live near their settlement. Experiments with living animals show, that tolerance comes at the cost of accumulating morphologic pathologies, genetically associated with tolerance, which was observed in many Yana wolves. High sociality and vocal behavior allowed wolves to approach human settlements, becoming some of the earliest domesticated animals. The site yielded evidence of a special attitude towards wolves, perhaps indicating a totemic cult. The Yana site material, interpreted in light of the biological characteristics of wolves, demonstrates for the first time the earliest stages of domestication, which can be characterized as self-domestication. © Stratum plus. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Siberia NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities) Arctic |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities) |
op_collection_id |
ftneicon |
language |
Russian |
topic |
Arctic Siberia Behavior Commensalism Dog Domestication Neoteny Palaeolithic Totemism Wolf Yana site |
spellingShingle |
Arctic Siberia Behavior Commensalism Dog Domestication Neoteny Palaeolithic Totemism Wolf Yana site Nikolskiy P.A. Sotnikova M.V. Nikol'skii A.A. Pitulko V.V. Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
topic_facet |
Arctic Siberia Behavior Commensalism Dog Domestication Neoteny Palaeolithic Totemism Wolf Yana site |
description |
To study the early stages of wolf domestication, we investigated the remains of large canids from the Yana site. Morphologically they cannot be called dogs, but there are certain indicators of the wolves' relationship with people, favorable to the start of domestication. The sample is dominated by animals with worn, partially missing teeth and various bone pathologies. Often these animals are medium-sized. One skull of a nearly adult individual demonstrates juvenile characteristics. The morphologic and morphometric anomalies observed can be explained by commensalism (deficient and young animals using the resources of human settlement as an alternative food source). On the other hand, pathologies could have been an indirect result of commensalism, rather than its cause. Due to the risk of conflict with humans, only the most tolerant animals could live near their settlement. Experiments with living animals show, that tolerance comes at the cost of accumulating morphologic pathologies, genetically associated with tolerance, which was observed in many Yana wolves. High sociality and vocal behavior allowed wolves to approach human settlements, becoming some of the earliest domesticated animals. The site yielded evidence of a special attitude towards wolves, perhaps indicating a totemic cult. The Yana site material, interpreted in light of the biological characteristics of wolves, demonstrates for the first time the earliest stages of domestication, which can be characterized as self-domestication. © Stratum plus. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Nikolskiy P.A. Sotnikova M.V. Nikol'skii A.A. Pitulko V.V. |
author_facet |
Nikolskiy P.A. Sotnikova M.V. Nikol'skii A.A. Pitulko V.V. |
author_sort |
Nikolskiy P.A. |
title |
Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
title_short |
Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
title_full |
Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
title_fullStr |
Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
title_full_unstemmed |
Predomestication and Wolf-human relationships in the arctic Siberia of 30, 000 years ago: Evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
title_sort |
predomestication and wolf-human relationships in the arctic siberia of 30, 000 years ago: evidence from the yana palaeolithic site |
publisher |
High Anthropological School University |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://openrepository.ru/article?id=258103 |
geographic |
Arctic |
geographic_facet |
Arctic |
genre |
Arctic Siberia |
genre_facet |
Arctic Siberia |
op_source |
Stratum Plus |
op_relation |
https://openrepository.ru/article?id=258103 |
op_rights |
open access |
_version_ |
1766331504413114368 |