Journal Article10.1017/LAQ.2017.57
Continental connections and insular distributions: deer bone artifacts of the precolumbian west indies—a review and synthesis with new records
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TL;DR: The remains of non-native deer (Cervidae) have been sparsely recorded in Amerindian archaeological sites of the West Indies, but evidence indicates the presence of at least two genera, white-tailed deer (Odocoileus) and brocket deer (Mazama), during the precolumbian era known as the Ceramic Age (ca. 500 BC-AD 1500) as mentioned in this paper.
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Abstract: The remains of non-native deer (Cervidae) have been sparsely recorded in Amerindian archaeological sites of the West Indies, but evidence indicates the presence of at least two genera, white-tailed deer (Odocoileus) and brocket deer (Mazama), during the precolumbian era known as the Ceramic Age (ca. 500 BC-AD 1500). Due to underreporting of finds and lack of regional integration of existing records, however, the West Indian distribution of cervid remains and their cultural importance are not well understood. Here, I synthesize records for unmodified and modified deer bone from 29 archaeological sites on seven islands in the precolumbian island Caribbean with descriptions for four new records of deer bone artifacts from Carriacou and Grenada. I discuss taxonomic attribution issues, evidence for manufacturing techniques, and the utilitarian and symbolic significance of deer bone artifacts. Particular attention is given to proportions of worked and unworked bone, element diversity, and skeletal part representation as a means to distinguish the introduction of living deer from the introduction of carcass products. The evidence presented here is consistent with island Amerindians importing cervid bone as finished artifacts or raw material for tool and ornament manufacture rather than live animals. This study enhances our understanding of the ways in which Amerindians were engaged in exchange networks based on the movement of exotic goods between the West Indies and continent. More broadly, it contributes to conceptual methods for distinguishing the transfer of body parts from the translocation of live animals in studies of exotic animal dispersal by humans.
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Citations
The Beasts at Large – Perennial Questions and New Paradigms for Caribbean Translocation Research. Part I: Ethnozoogeography of Mammals
TL;DR: This first paper provides foundations for an ensuing final discussion in which it is argued that intentional faunal translocation is sufficiently robust as a behavioural phenomenon across time and space to warrant theoretical treatment from an evolutionary perspective.
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Pre-Columbian Amerindian Lifeways at the Sabazan Site, Carriacou, West Indies
TL;DR: A recent excavation at the Ceramic Age village site of Sabazan on Carriacou, Grenada, indicates long-term occupation spanning AD 400 to 1400.
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Island networks: transformations of inter-community social relationships in the Lesser Antilles at the advent of European colonialism
Corinne L. Hofman,Lewis Borck,Lewis Borck,Jason E. Laffoon,Jason E. Laffoon,Emma Slayton,Rebecca Scott,Thomas W. Breukel,Catarina Guzzo Falci,Maroussia Favre,Maroussia Favre,Menno L. P. Hoogland +11 more
TL;DR: The Caribbean Sea was a conduit for human mobility and the exchange of goods and ideas during the whole of its pre-colonial history as mentioned in this paper and the period cal. AD 1000-1800, covering the Late Ceramic Age and...
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From icon of empire to national emblem: new evidence for the fallow deer of Barbuda
Sophia Perdikaris,Allison Bain,Sandrine Grouard,Karis Baker,Edith Gonzalez,A. Rus Hoelzel,Holly Miller,Reaksha Persaud,Naomi Sykes +8 more
TL;DR: Barbuda and Antigua's national animal is the fallow deer, a species native to the eastern Mediterranean that has been transported around the world by people during the last 8,000 years.
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