Animal remains from twelve Iron Age (ca. 500 BC-1200/1300AD) sites from Southern and Western Finland, showing a mixture of finds and features typical of both settlement sites and cemeteries, were investigated using a zooarchaeological, taphonomic and contextual approach. Rarefaction analysis of the species richness and anatomical distribution indicates that the samples included both general domestic waste type and species and element-selective deposits of cattle and horse skulls, mandibles and limb bones. According to radiocarbon dating results, there seems to be a gap between the dates of burials and those of other ritual activities, indicating that the context of such deposits is a disused cemetery. The faunal deposits could represent rem...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
The deposition of animals in graves was an essential aspect of burial practice in Scandinavia during...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
The paper discusses the remains of domestic animals showing signs of ritual deposition at the settl...
In this article, we combine zooarchaeological, ethnological and folk-belief material to study the de...
This paper is a synthesis of zooarchaeological evidence from 27 medieval and post-medieval sites fro...
Animal bones from archaeological sites, the so called refuse faunas, can give valuable information a...
Faunal material from urban sites is important for understanding the socio-economic specialisation an...
"The importance of the zooarchaeological evidence as a source for ritual practices in ancient Greece...
In this article, zooarchaeological evidence from 37 medieval and early modern sites in Estonia were ...
Social practices concerning the treatment of human and animal remains in the Iron Age have long been...
As humans, we interact with our environment and the other species inhabiting it in a variety of ways...
The deposition of animals in graves was an essential aspect of burial practice in Scandinavia during...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
The deposition of animals in graves was an essential aspect of burial practice in Scandinavia during...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
The paper discusses the remains of domestic animals showing signs of ritual deposition at the settl...
In this article, we combine zooarchaeological, ethnological and folk-belief material to study the de...
This paper is a synthesis of zooarchaeological evidence from 27 medieval and post-medieval sites fro...
Animal bones from archaeological sites, the so called refuse faunas, can give valuable information a...
Faunal material from urban sites is important for understanding the socio-economic specialisation an...
"The importance of the zooarchaeological evidence as a source for ritual practices in ancient Greece...
In this article, zooarchaeological evidence from 37 medieval and early modern sites in Estonia were ...
Social practices concerning the treatment of human and animal remains in the Iron Age have long been...
As humans, we interact with our environment and the other species inhabiting it in a variety of ways...
The deposition of animals in graves was an essential aspect of burial practice in Scandinavia during...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...
The deposition of animals in graves was an essential aspect of burial practice in Scandinavia during...
Today, the pets we own are thought of as friends and family members. A lot of people even go as far ...