The pig predominates the zooarchaeological assemblage of the second Iron Age settlement of Levroux Les Arènes, in a context characterised by intensive craft and trade activities. The pattern of pig mortality profiles (targeting two-year-old animals), standardized butchery cut-marks and the underoccurrence of ham-bearing bones suggest there was standardized pork production potentially designed for trade. This hypothesis was investigated through enamel δ18O analysis, allowing the seasonality of pig births to be determined and the reasons for a particular age class in the kill-off patterns to be explained. Results reveal that pig births were spread across more than half a year, suggesting that slaughter was not seasonally constrained, but was...
Middens of the southern British late Bronze and Iron Age are vast accumulations of cultural debris t...
International audienceEthnographical, historical and archaeological evidence suggests that a great d...
I have a new paper published that explores the impact of Black Death on pig management...I hope it i...
The pig predominates the zooarchaeological assemblage of the second Iron Age settlement of Levroux L...
The pig predominates the zooarchaeological assemblage of the second Iron Age settlement of Levroux L...
Since its domestication, pig played an important role in human diet, providing meat and fat. The stu...
International audienceDuring the 2nd century BC, in the settlement of Levroux Les Arènes, livestock ...
In this article we present a comparative study of pig and cattle morphologies, and stable isotope an...
By means of a sequential isotopic analysis of the dental remains of pigs from the La Tène village of...
By means of a sequential isotopic analysis of the dental remains of pigs from the La Tène village of...
International audienceSince domestication during the mid 11th millennium BP in the Near East and the...
The hypotheses explaining the changes in husbandry practices in Gaul slightly before its conquest an...
Since domestication during the mid 11th millennium BP in the Near East and the 8th millennium BP in ...
International audienceMobility is crucial in animal husbandry to overcome scarcity of food and the r...
Ethnographical, historical and archaeological evidence suggests that a great diversity in pig husban...
Middens of the southern British late Bronze and Iron Age are vast accumulations of cultural debris t...
International audienceEthnographical, historical and archaeological evidence suggests that a great d...
I have a new paper published that explores the impact of Black Death on pig management...I hope it i...
The pig predominates the zooarchaeological assemblage of the second Iron Age settlement of Levroux L...
The pig predominates the zooarchaeological assemblage of the second Iron Age settlement of Levroux L...
Since its domestication, pig played an important role in human diet, providing meat and fat. The stu...
International audienceDuring the 2nd century BC, in the settlement of Levroux Les Arènes, livestock ...
In this article we present a comparative study of pig and cattle morphologies, and stable isotope an...
By means of a sequential isotopic analysis of the dental remains of pigs from the La Tène village of...
By means of a sequential isotopic analysis of the dental remains of pigs from the La Tène village of...
International audienceSince domestication during the mid 11th millennium BP in the Near East and the...
The hypotheses explaining the changes in husbandry practices in Gaul slightly before its conquest an...
Since domestication during the mid 11th millennium BP in the Near East and the 8th millennium BP in ...
International audienceMobility is crucial in animal husbandry to overcome scarcity of food and the r...
Ethnographical, historical and archaeological evidence suggests that a great diversity in pig husban...
Middens of the southern British late Bronze and Iron Age are vast accumulations of cultural debris t...
International audienceEthnographical, historical and archaeological evidence suggests that a great d...
I have a new paper published that explores the impact of Black Death on pig management...I hope it i...