Analyze Diet

Science advances.

Periodical
Science
Biological Science Disciplines
Publisher:
American Association for the Advancement of Science,
Country: United States
Language: English
Author(s):
American Association for the Advancement of Science,
Start Year:2015 -
ISSN:
2375-2548 (Electronic)
2375-2548 (Linking)
Impact Factor
13.6
2022
NLM ID:101653440
(OCoLC):892343396
LCCN:2014203143
Classification:W1
Tracing horseback riding and transport in the human skeleton.
Science advances    September 20, 2024   Volume 10, Issue 38 eado9774 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.ado9774
Hosek L, James RJ, Taylor WTT.Among the most widely used methods for understanding human-horse relationships in the archaeological record is the identification of human skeletal pathologies associated with mounted horseback riding. In particular, archaeologists encountering specific bony changes to the hip, femur, and lower back often assert a causal link between these features and prolonged periods of mounted horseback riding. The identification of these features have recently been used to assert the early practice of mounted horseback riding among the Yamnaya culture of western Eurasia during the third and fourth millenn...
Biomolecular evidence reveals mares and long-distance imported horses sacrificed by the last pagans in temperate Europe.
Science advances    May 17, 2024   Volume 10, Issue 20 eado3529 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.ado3529
French KM, Musiał AD, Karczewski M, Daugnora L, Shiroukhov R, Ropka-Molik K, Baranowski T, Bertašius M, Skvortsov K, Szymański P....Horse sacrifice and deposition are enigmatic features of funerary rituals identified across prehistoric Europe that persisted in the eastern Baltic. Genetic and isotopic analysis of horses in Balt cemeteries [1st to 13th centuries CE (Common Era)] dismantle prevailing narratives that locally procured stallions were exclusively selected. Strontium isotope analysis provides direct evidence for long-distance (~300 to 1500 kilometers) maritime transport of Fennoscandian horses to the eastern Baltic in the Late Viking Age (11th to 13th centuries CE). Genetic analysis proves that horses of both sexe...
Interdisciplinary evidence for early domestic horse exploitation in southern Patagonia.
Science advances    December 8, 2023   Volume 9, Issue 49 eadk5201 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adk5201
Taylor WTT, Belardi JB, Barberena R, Coltrain JB, Marina FC, Borrero LA, Conver JL, Hodgins G, Admiraal M, Craig OE, Lucquin A, Talbot HM, Lundy J....The introduction of domestic horses transformed Indigenous societies across the grasslands of Argentina, leading to the emergence of specialized horse cultures across the Southern Cone. However, the dynamics of this introduction are poorly chronicled by historic records. Here, we apply archaeozoological and biomolecular techniques to horse remains from the site of Chorrillo Grande 1 in southern Argentina. Osteological and taphonomic analyses suggest that horses were pastorally managed and used for food by Aónikenk/Tehuelche hunter-gatherers before the onset of permanent European settlement, a...
The genetic identity of the earliest human-made hybrid animals, the kungas of Syro-Mesopotamia.
Science advances    January 14, 2022   Volume 8, Issue 2 eabm0218 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abm0218
Bennett EA, Weber J, Bendhafer W, Champlot S, Peters J, Schwartz GM, Grange T, Geigl EM.Before the introduction of domestic horses in Mesopotamia in the late third millennium BCE, contemporary cuneiform tablets and seals document intentional breeding of highly valued equids called kungas for use in diplomacy, ceremony, and warfare. Their precise zoological classification, however, has never been conclusively determined. Morphometric analysis of equids uncovered in rich Early Bronze Age burials at Umm el-Marra, Syria, placed them beyond the ranges reported for other known equid species. We sequenced the genomes of one of these ~4500-year-old equids, together with an ~11,000-year-o...
Ancient DNA shows domestic horses were introduced in the southern Caucasus and Anatolia during the Bronze Age.
Science advances    September 16, 2020   Volume 6, Issue 38 eabb0030 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abb0030
Guimaraes S, Arbuckle BS, Peters J, Adcock SE, Buitenhuis H, Chazin H, Manaseryan N, Uerpmann HP, Grange T, Geigl EM.Despite the important roles that horses have played in human history, particularly in the spread of languages and cultures, and correspondingly intensive research on this topic, the origin of domestic horses remains elusive. Several domestication centers have been hypothesized, but most of these have been invalidated through recent paleogenetic studies. Anatolia is a region with an extended history of horse exploitation that has been considered a candidate for the origins of domestic horses but has never been subject to detailed investigation. Our paleogenetic study of pre- and protohistoric h...
Late Quaternary horses in Eurasia in the face of climate and vegetation change.
Science advances    July 25, 2018   Volume 4, Issue 7 eaar5589 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aar5589
Leonardi M, Boschin F, Giampoudakis K, Beyer RM, Krapp M, Bendrey R, Sommer R, Boscato P, Manica A, Nogues-Bravo D, Orlando L.Wild horses thrived across Eurasia until the Last Glacial Maximum to collapse after the beginning of the Holocene. The interplay of climate change, species adaptability to different environments, and human domestication in horse history is still lacking coherent continental-scale analysis integrating different lines of evidence. We assembled temporal and geographical information on 3070 horse occurrences across Eurasia, frequency data for 1120 archeological layers in Europe, and matched them to paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental simulations for the Late Quaternary. Climate controlled the dis...
Decline of genetic diversity in ancient domestic stallions in Europe.
Science advances    April 18, 2018   Volume 4, Issue 4 eaap9691 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aap9691
Wutke S, Sandoval-Castellanos E, Benecke N, Döhle HJ, Friederich S, Gonzalez J, Hofreiter M, Lõugas L, Magnell O, Malaspinas AS, Morales-Muñiz A....Present-day domestic horses are immensely diverse in their maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA, yet they show very little variation on their paternally inherited Y chromosome. Although it has recently been shown that Y chromosomal diversity in domestic horses was higher at least until the Iron Age, when and why this diversity disappeared remain controversial questions. We genotyped 16 recently discovered Y chromosomal single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 96 ancient Eurasian stallions spanning the early domestication stages (Copper and Bronze Age) to the Middle Ages. Using this Y chromosomal t...
Improved de novo genomic assembly for the domestic donkey.
Science advances    April 4, 2018   Volume 4, Issue 4 eaaq0392 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aaq0392
Renaud G, Petersen B, Seguin-Orlando A, Bertelsen MF, Waller A, Newton R, Paillot R, Bryant N, Vaudin M, Librado P, Orlando L.Donkeys and horses share a common ancestor dating back to about 4 million years ago. Although a high-quality genome assembly at the chromosomal level is available for the horse, current assemblies available for the donkey are limited to moderately sized scaffolds. The absence of a better-quality assembly for the donkey has hampered studies involving the characterization of patterns of genetic variation at the genome-wide scale. These range from the application of genomic tools to selective breeding and conservation to the more fundamental characterization of the genomic loci underlying speciat...
Repetitive mammalian dwarfing during ancient greenhouse warming events.
Science advances    March 15, 2017   Volume 3, Issue 3 e1601430 doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1601430
D'Ambrosia AR, Clyde WC, Fricke HC, Gingerich PD, Abels HA.Abrupt perturbations of the global carbon cycle during the early Eocene are associated with rapid global warming events, which are analogous in many ways to present greenhouse warming. Mammal dwarfing has been observed, along with other changes in community structure, during the largest of these ancient global warming events, known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum [PETM; ~56 million years ago (Ma)]. We show that mammalian dwarfing accompanied the subsequent, smaller-magnitude warming event known as Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 [ETM2 (~53 Ma)]. Statistically significant decrease in body size...