Pit features, frequently reported at archaeological sites, are usually thought be culturally produced. The numbers and forms of pits found at an archaeological site influence inferences of human activity; therefore, the inferred cultural origin of pits at archaeological sites needs to be demonstrated, rather than assumed. Ethnoarchaeological study of dog digging behavior, combined with our understanding of the long symbiotic relationship between human beings and canines, suggests that canine disturbance may be a significant factor in site formation processes. Canines are the probable agent for certain commonly reported pit forms, and are probably implicated in the disturbance of human-dug pits much more often than commonly understood. Dogs ...
Dogs have been a part of civilization for thousands of years and have maintained one of the closest ...
When archaeological human remains are absent or otherwise unavailable for bone chemistry-based paleo...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...
Dogs have been human companions for at least 15,000 years (Morey 2010:69-70). How this relationship ...
In today’s archaeology there’s a growing need for non-invasive prospection methods. However there’s ...
Both the affectionate and mutually adaptive relationships that contemporary humans share with the do...
Despite the many medical, economical, and intellectual advances that technological proliferation has...
Dogs ( Canis familiaris ) are ubiquitous in human settlements the world over. A range of studies sug...
The special relationship that humans share with Canis familiaris (Caddo: dìitsi’) is the result of a...
Current evidence suggests domestications of the dog were incipient developments in many areas of the...
The settlement site of Riccione-IPERCOOP presents different occupational phases dating between the l...
Dog burials have been found in Egypt dating as far back as the Badarian culture. During the Predynas...
Carnivores have long been known as important taphonomic agents that accumulate and destroy bones thu...
Dogs were one of several domestic animals kept by precolonial southern African herders, but their ec...
Dog burials have been found in Egypt dating as far back as the Badarian culture. During the Predynas...
Dogs have been a part of civilization for thousands of years and have maintained one of the closest ...
When archaeological human remains are absent or otherwise unavailable for bone chemistry-based paleo...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...
Dogs have been human companions for at least 15,000 years (Morey 2010:69-70). How this relationship ...
In today’s archaeology there’s a growing need for non-invasive prospection methods. However there’s ...
Both the affectionate and mutually adaptive relationships that contemporary humans share with the do...
Despite the many medical, economical, and intellectual advances that technological proliferation has...
Dogs ( Canis familiaris ) are ubiquitous in human settlements the world over. A range of studies sug...
The special relationship that humans share with Canis familiaris (Caddo: dìitsi’) is the result of a...
Current evidence suggests domestications of the dog were incipient developments in many areas of the...
The settlement site of Riccione-IPERCOOP presents different occupational phases dating between the l...
Dog burials have been found in Egypt dating as far back as the Badarian culture. During the Predynas...
Carnivores have long been known as important taphonomic agents that accumulate and destroy bones thu...
Dogs were one of several domestic animals kept by precolonial southern African herders, but their ec...
Dog burials have been found in Egypt dating as far back as the Badarian culture. During the Predynas...
Dogs have been a part of civilization for thousands of years and have maintained one of the closest ...
When archaeological human remains are absent or otherwise unavailable for bone chemistry-based paleo...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...