Archaeological Discovery

Volume 7, Issue 1 (January 2019)

ISSN Print: 2331-1959   ISSN Online: 2331-1967

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A Study of Dog Coprolite from Late Neolithic Pile-Dwelling Site in Slovenia

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DOI: 10.4236/ad.2019.71002    910 Downloads   1,784 Views  Citations
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ABSTRACT

More than 5000 years old dog’s coprolite was found during rescue excavation at Črnelnik pile-dwelling site in Slovenia. Although human and dog diets may overlap considerably, the content of the consumed and digested food, consisting of plant and/or animal remains biologically diverse. While the investigated fossil excrement contained many fish head bones, scales and teeth of Cyprinidae family, we believe that we are dealing with an individual that had only eaten fish heads, that is why it was suggested to be of dog. Beside the origin and the daily diet of the individual together with the nutritional habits of the dog in the Late Neolithic, the analyses of coprolite provide more important information, for example: the time of year of the deposit, the environmental conditions there, the size and the health of the animal as well as care (or the status) of domesticated animal for humans. The discovery confirms again that animal dung should be an important part of archaeological investigations, specially at waterlogged sites.

Share and Cite:

Tolar, T. and Galik, A. (2019) A Study of Dog Coprolite from Late Neolithic Pile-Dwelling Site in Slovenia. Archaeological Discovery, 7, 20-29. doi: 10.4236/ad.2019.71002.

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