Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – Birds were an important source of food for hunter-gatherer communities in Upper Mesopotamia at the beginning of the Neolithic period, around 9,000 years BCE. This is shown in a new study by SNSB and LMU archaeozoologists Dr. Nadja Pöllath and Prof. Dr. Joris Peters.
Pillar 43 from Göbekli Tepe depicting a vulture with its wings spread. Vultures were not only the most important birds in the iconography of Early Neolithic hunter-gatherer groups, they were also hunted. Credit: N. Pöllath
The two scientists analyzed bird remains from Göbekli Tepe and Gusir Höyük, two Neolithic settlements in present-day Turkey.
In addition to mammals, ranging from aurochs to hares, or fish, foragers also pursued an impressively large spectrum of bird species in Southeast Anatolia 11,000 years ago. They were hunted mainly, but not exclusively, in autumn and winter—at the time of year, when many bird species form larger flocks and migratory birds cross the area. The species lists are therefore very extensive.
At the Early Neolithic settlement of Göbekli Tepe, for example, about 18 km northeast of present-day Şanlıurfa (SE Anatolia, Turkey), the researchers identified the remains of at least 84 bird species. Dr. Pöllath, curator at the Bavarian State Collection for Paleoanatomy (Staatssammlung für Paläoanatomie München SNSB-SPM) and Prof. Dr. Peters, chair of the Insтιтute for Paleoanatomy, Domestication Research and History of Veterinary Medicine at LMU München and director of the state collection, identified the Neolithic bird bones with the aid of the reference skeletons of the state collection.
The researchers were surprised by the large number of small pᴀsserine birds identified at Göbekli Tepe, comprising mainly starlings and buntings. In principle, the Early Neolithic inhabitants of Göbekli Tepe hunted birds in all habitats—mainly in the open grᴀssland and wooded steppe in their direct surroundings, but also in the wetlands and gallery forest somewhat further away.
“We do not know exactly, why they hunted so many small pᴀsserine birds at Göbekli Tepe. Due to their low live weight, the effort exceeds the meat yield by far. Perhaps they were simply a delicacy that enriched the menu in autumn, or they had a significance that we cannot deduce yet from the bone remains,” Pöllath commented.
The inhabitants of Gusir Höyük, another Early Neolithic settlement on the shores of Lake Gusir, about 40 km south of the present-day provincial capital of Siirt, even further southeast in present-day Turkey, had a different approach. When fowling, they pursued almost exclusively two species populating open hilly grᴀsslands: the Chukar partridge (Alectoris chukar) and the gray partridge (Perdix perdix). They apparently ignored the avifauna of the nearby floodplains and the lake.
Tarsometatarsi (bone of lower leg) of birds from Göbekli Tepe (top to bottom): Eurasian jackdaw (Coloeus monedula), hooded crow (Corvus cornix), small duck (Anas crecca/Spatula querquedula), Chukar partridge (Alectoris chukar), medium-sized owl (Asio sp.) Credit: N. Pöllath
Among several hundred fragments from Gusir Höyük, the archaeozoologists from Munich could not identify a single bone pertaining to waterfowl. “Gusir Höyük is the only Neolithic community in Upper Mesopotamia known to us that deliberately avoided wetlands and riverine landscapes when fowling, although they were present. Our results suggest that this was a cultural peculiarity of the Neolithic people inhabiting Gusir Höyük,” said Peters.
“Our comparison of a number of Early Neolithic sites in the region revealed that the sites in the Euphrates Basin share many similarities regarding their meat procurement, while each community in the Tigris Basin seemingly developed its own subsistence strategy,” added Pöllath.
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Neolithic settlers of Upper Mesopotamia hunted birds not only for their meat. Some species, such as cranes or raptors, certainly had a more symbolic meaning and served ritual purposes, the researchers suspect. In a future study, they will focus on these socio-cultural aspects of the human-avian relationship.
The study was published in the journal Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences.
Written by Conny Waters – AncientPages.com Staff Writer