Challenges in Reconstructing Past Exploitations of Atlantic Cod: A Zooarchaeological Case Study from Early Medieval England

The thesis presents a novel zooarchaeological, statistical, and ecological analysis of fish bone assemblages from early medieval England. Comprehensive evidence is presented of coastal and pelagic fishing of larger bodied, healthier populations in England from the 8th cent.CE, pushing back the assum...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Blevis, Rachel
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cambridge 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/368943
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.108952
Description
Summary:The thesis presents a novel zooarchaeological, statistical, and ecological analysis of fish bone assemblages from early medieval England. Comprehensive evidence is presented of coastal and pelagic fishing of larger bodied, healthier populations in England from the 8th cent.CE, pushing back the assumed rise in marine fishing commonly referred to as the ‘Fish Event Horizon’, or the FEH, by 300 years. The findings are an important contribution to assessing past human impacts on aquatic ecosystems, which to date have not been widely researched. Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) was selected as the main focus of the study due to its prominence in modern and historical fishery economies, based on studies of modern and archaeological materials. Identifications of diverse marine taxa, including cod, were part of the zooarchaeological analysis of a previously unexamined, exceptionally large assemblage from the pre-FEH monastic site of Lyminge. Lyminge was chosen for analysis due to its early occupation dates, which precede the previously theorised onset of marine fishing, and its exceptionally large fish bone assemblage. Fish body sizes were estimated from both newly developed and preexisting regression models. The novel models were constructed from a uniquely large and diverse dataset of modern cod specimens collected for this purpose, and applied to new data from Lyminge and to a legacy dataset from Coppergate. The estimated archaeological cod sizes were further compared to modern trawl survey data. A significant temporal decrease was observed between both archaeological datasets and the modern data. The larger archaeological cod body sizes suggest significantly improved weights, reproductivity, and health of cod populations prior to the onset of commercial fishing in the North Sea. Furthermore, shifts in past food web interactions are also suggested, revealing shifting ecologies of other species interacting in the same food web. Combined with the positive identifications of other pelagic species, the larger archaeological ...