Archeological Record

Despite the difficulties, discovering when and how this enduring relationship first appeared are questions of tremendous scientific interest and importance. Authorities differ with respect to the exact historical moment or time frame, but many prehistoric sites show that a close association between humans and dogs has existed continuously for many thousands of years. Although a loose symbiotic mutualism probably existed long beforehand, the earliest archeological evidence of a "true" domestic dog is dated to 14,000 years before the present (BP). The artifact (a mandible) was unearthed from a paleolithic grave site at Oberkassel in Germany (Nobis, 1979, in Clutton-Brock and Jewell, 1993). Protsch and Berger (1973) have collected and carbon dated canine skeletal remains taken at various sites around the world, showing great antiquity and geographical dispersion: Star Carr (Yorkshire, England), 9500 BP; Argissa-Mag-ula (Thessaly), 9000 BP; Hacilar (Turkey), 9000 BP; Sarab (Iran), 8900 BP; and Jericho, 8800 BP. One of the most famous of these archeological finds is a Natufian skeleton of an old human (sex unknown) and a puppy buried together some 12,000 years ago at Ein Mallaha in Israel (Davis and Valla, 1978). The human's hand is positioned over the chest of the 4- or 5-month-old puppy (Fig.

1.1). One is moved by the ostensible intimacy of the two species buried together, and even tempted to ascribe a feeling of "tenderness" to the embrace binding the person and puppy together over the centuries.

The earliest remains of a domestic dog in North America were found at the Jaguar Cave site in the Beaverhead Mountains of Idaho. These bones had been previously dated from 10,400 to 11,500 BP, but radiocarbon dating of some of the artifacts revealed that they are "intrusions" of a much more recent origin, with a probable age not exceeding 3000 years (Clutton-Brock and Jewell, 1993).

0 0

Post a comment

  • Receive news updates via email from this site