A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces

The first dogs appeared in Eurasia at least 15,000 years ago and the dog is widely regarded as the first domesticated species in human history. However, while, over the past 20 years, extensive research attention has been aimed at deciphering the origin of dogs, the later stages of their history hav...

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Main Author: Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/29611/
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spelling ftwhiterose:oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:29611 2023-05-15T18:46:10+02:00 A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg 2021-01 https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/29611/ unknown Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg orcid:0000-0003-2421-4831 (2021) A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces. PhD thesis, University of York. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftwhiterose 2023-01-30T21:29:05Z The first dogs appeared in Eurasia at least 15,000 years ago and the dog is widely regarded as the first domesticated species in human history. However, while, over the past 20 years, extensive research attention has been aimed at deciphering the origin of dogs, the later stages of their history have been largely neglected. This PhD thesis attempts to elucidate the relationship between humans and archaeological canids through state-of-the-art biomolecular techniques. These analyses are used to study the gastrointestinal content of the Tumat Puppies, two Late Pleistocene canid mummies, to evaluate the hypothesis that they are littermates as well as their proposed association with a possible mammoth butchering site. Further analyses are carried out on dog palaeofaeces from the Early Holocene Zhokhov Island site in Siberia, Russia, and from the pre-contact Nunalleq site in Alaska, USA. The results of these studies demonstrate the viability of using palaeofaeces to reconstruct dog diet in the past and show that this information can be used to understand the strategies employed by ancient cultures to manage and provision for their dogs. The thesis further presents the first successful application of palaeoproteomics to palaeofaeces, which, in combination, can provide novel insight into past dietary practices. Together, these case studies demonstrate that the analysed substrates contain important information about ancient subsistence strategies and although they are hampered by a number of methodological challenges, have great potential for future dietary studies. Thesis Zhokhov Island Alaska Siberia White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York) Tumat ENVELOPE(139.227,139.227,70.724,70.724)
institution Open Polar
collection White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York)
op_collection_id ftwhiterose
language unknown
description The first dogs appeared in Eurasia at least 15,000 years ago and the dog is widely regarded as the first domesticated species in human history. However, while, over the past 20 years, extensive research attention has been aimed at deciphering the origin of dogs, the later stages of their history have been largely neglected. This PhD thesis attempts to elucidate the relationship between humans and archaeological canids through state-of-the-art biomolecular techniques. These analyses are used to study the gastrointestinal content of the Tumat Puppies, two Late Pleistocene canid mummies, to evaluate the hypothesis that they are littermates as well as their proposed association with a possible mammoth butchering site. Further analyses are carried out on dog palaeofaeces from the Early Holocene Zhokhov Island site in Siberia, Russia, and from the pre-contact Nunalleq site in Alaska, USA. The results of these studies demonstrate the viability of using palaeofaeces to reconstruct dog diet in the past and show that this information can be used to understand the strategies employed by ancient cultures to manage and provision for their dogs. The thesis further presents the first successful application of palaeoproteomics to palaeofaeces, which, in combination, can provide novel insight into past dietary practices. Together, these case studies demonstrate that the analysed substrates contain important information about ancient subsistence strategies and although they are hampered by a number of methodological challenges, have great potential for future dietary studies.
format Thesis
author Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg
spellingShingle Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg
A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
author_facet Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg
author_sort Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg
title A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
title_short A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
title_full A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
title_fullStr A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
title_full_unstemmed A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces
title_sort different perspective on canid domestication: insights from gastrointestinal content and palaeofaeces
publishDate 2021
url https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/29611/
long_lat ENVELOPE(139.227,139.227,70.724,70.724)
geographic Tumat
geographic_facet Tumat
genre Zhokhov Island
Alaska
Siberia
genre_facet Zhokhov Island
Alaska
Siberia
op_relation Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg orcid:0000-0003-2421-4831 (2021) A Different Perspective on Canid Domestication: Insights from Gastrointestinal Content and Palaeofaeces. PhD thesis, University of York.
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