Our analysis of over 28,000 osteometric measurements from fossil remains dating between c. 5600 and 1500 BCE reveals a substantial reduction in body mass of 33 % in Neolithic cen-tral European domestic cattle. We investigate various plausible explanations for this pheno-typic adaptation, dismissing climatic change as a causal factor, and further rejecting the hypothesis that it was caused by an increase in the proportion of smaller adult females in the population. Instead we find some support for the hypothesis that the size decrease was driven by a demographic shift towards smaller newborns from sub-adult breeding as a result of intensifying meat production strategies during the Neolithic
Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, childhoo...
In this paper, measurements of 2.012 bone remains from four different domestic species (sheep, goats...
<div><p>Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, ...
<div><p>Our analysis of over 28,000 osteometric measurements from fossil remains dating between c. 5...
Our analysis of over 28,000 osteometric measurements from fossil remains dating between c. 5600 and ...
Cattle were the most common domestic livestock animal throughout much of the Neolithic period in the...
Cattle dominate archaeozoological assemblages from the north-central Europe between the sixth and fi...
The marked increase in caprine frequencies observed by the mid-Pre-Pottery Neolithic, is generally a...
BACKGROUND: Cattle domestication started in the 9(th) millennium BC in Southwest Asia. Domesticated...
New evidence for cattle husbandry practices during the earliest period of the southern Scan-dinavian...
This study examines sub-pathological alterations to cattle foot bones from eleven central and wester...
Purpose Improve understanding of the links between biological variables (sex, body size and anatomic...
The distribution of the first domesticated animals and crops along the coastal area of Atlantic NW E...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, childhoo...
In this paper, measurements of 2.012 bone remains from four different domestic species (sheep, goats...
<div><p>Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, ...
<div><p>Our analysis of over 28,000 osteometric measurements from fossil remains dating between c. 5...
Our analysis of over 28,000 osteometric measurements from fossil remains dating between c. 5600 and ...
Cattle were the most common domestic livestock animal throughout much of the Neolithic period in the...
Cattle dominate archaeozoological assemblages from the north-central Europe between the sixth and fi...
The marked increase in caprine frequencies observed by the mid-Pre-Pottery Neolithic, is generally a...
BACKGROUND: Cattle domestication started in the 9(th) millennium BC in Southwest Asia. Domesticated...
New evidence for cattle husbandry practices during the earliest period of the southern Scan-dinavian...
This study examines sub-pathological alterations to cattle foot bones from eleven central and wester...
Purpose Improve understanding of the links between biological variables (sex, body size and anatomic...
The distribution of the first domesticated animals and crops along the coastal area of Atlantic NW E...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, childhoo...
In this paper, measurements of 2.012 bone remains from four different domestic species (sheep, goats...
<div><p>Early life conditions play an important role in determining adult body size. In particular, ...