This paper brings together zooarchaeological data from Neolithic to Post-medieval sites in England to explore the plasticity of cultural attitudes to the consumption of wild animals. It shows how, through time, game has been considered variously as ‘tabooed’ and ‘edible’, each having implications for patterns of biodiversity and wildlife management. The essential points being made are that deeper-time studies can reveal how human perceptions of ‘surplus foods’ have the potential to both create and remedy problems of environmental sustainability and food security. Perhaps more significantly, this paper argues that understanding the bio-cultural past of edible wild animal species has the potential to transform human attitudes to game in the p...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
This article explores some of the ways in which historians can, and should, engage with current deba...
This paper brings together zooarchaeological data from Neolithic to Post-medieval sites in England t...
Almost every ecosystem has been amended so that plants and animals can be used as food, fibre, fodde...
Around ten thousand years ago, people around the globe began domesticating plants and animals. Peopl...
Foraging is a popular modern pastime, as evidenced by the growing number of books, television progra...
Hunting and gathering remained the main mode of subsistence of humanity for hundreds of thousands of...
In many parts of the world, millions of wildlife species are hunted for sport, food, skins, and othe...
Wild food is an iconic ecosystem service that receives little attention in quantifying, valuating an...
This presentation will address the inherent complexities of humans and wildlife coexisting in the sa...
Humans have altered up to half of the world's land surface. Wildlife living within or close to these...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
The present paper draws from a study of the role of zoos in forming attitudes towards biodiversity a...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
This article explores some of the ways in which historians can, and should, engage with current deba...
This paper brings together zooarchaeological data from Neolithic to Post-medieval sites in England t...
Almost every ecosystem has been amended so that plants and animals can be used as food, fibre, fodde...
Around ten thousand years ago, people around the globe began domesticating plants and animals. Peopl...
Foraging is a popular modern pastime, as evidenced by the growing number of books, television progra...
Hunting and gathering remained the main mode of subsistence of humanity for hundreds of thousands of...
In many parts of the world, millions of wildlife species are hunted for sport, food, skins, and othe...
Wild food is an iconic ecosystem service that receives little attention in quantifying, valuating an...
This presentation will address the inherent complexities of humans and wildlife coexisting in the sa...
Humans have altered up to half of the world's land surface. Wildlife living within or close to these...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
The present paper draws from a study of the role of zoos in forming attitudes towards biodiversity a...
Several hundred species are hunted for wild meat in the tropics, supporting the diets, customs, and ...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
This article explores some of the ways in which historians can, and should, engage with current deba...