Mammoth meat was a delicacy 30,000 years ago: Gravettian people hun… beasts for food - but fed their dogs reind
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Mammoth meat was a delicacy 30,000 years
ago: Gravettian people hunted the beasts
for food - but fed their dogs reindeer
Fossils were uncovered at prehistoric Předmostí site in Czech Republic
Scientists studied nitrogen stable isotopes in human and animal fossils
They found the culture left behind huge amounts of mammoth carcasses
Dogs ate reindeer meat, probably discarded by their Gravettian owners
The study shows how dogs were already being looked after by humans
It also confirms importance of mammoth in the prehistoric human diet
By ELLIE ZOLFAGHARIFARD FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 11:41 GMT, 25 November 2014 | UPDATED: 11:42 GMT, 25 November 2014
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Reindeer meat may be considered a delicacy in some countries, but 30,000 years ago our European
ancestors preferred eating mammoths.
Cuts of reindeer were instead saved for their canine companions, according to research at Předmostí,
a prehistoric site in the Czech Republic.
The Gravettian people used the bones of more than 1,000 mammoths to build their settlement, as well
as creating incredible ivory sculptures.
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2848602/Mammoth-m…-ago-Gravettian-people-hunted-beasts-fo
Mammoth meat was a delicacy 30,000 years ago: Gravettian people hun… beasts for food - but fed their dogs reind
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Researchers at University of Tübingen wanted to know whether the Gravettian culture harvested the bones
from already dead mammoths, or if they hunted them for food. Artist's impression of a mammoth pictured
But researchers at the University of Tübingen wanted to know whether the Gravettian culture
harvested the bones from already dead mammoths, or if they hunted them for food.
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Scientists carried out an analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes in human and animal fossil
bones from the site.
They then tested to see whether the Gravettian people ate mammoth meat by examining the bones
alongside bones from dogs at the site.
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Reindeer meat may be considered a delicacy in some countries, but 30,000 years ago our European ancestors
preferred eating mammoths. Cuts of reindeer were instead saved for their canine companions, according to
research at Předmostí, a prehistoric site in the Czech Republic
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2848602/Mammoth-m…-ago-Gravettian-people-hunted-beasts-fo
Mammoth meat was a delicacy 30,000 years ago: Gravettian people hun… beasts for food - but fed their dogs reind
They discovered that the culture probably left
behind large amounts of mammoth carcasses as
shown by the finding that brown bears, wolves
and wolverines also ate mammoths.
CULTURE OF GRAVETTIAN PEOPLE
Surprisingly, dogs in the settlement did not show
a high level of mammoth consumption, but rather
consumed reindeer meat, probably discarded by
their owners.
The culture appeared at a time when
Neanderthals were being displaced by modern
humans, who had entered Europe from Africa
and the Middle East some 15,000 years before.
The study confirms that mammoths were a key
component of the prehistoric diet in Europe
30,000 years ago, and that dogs were already
being looked after by humans.
Separate research has found that the sudden
appearance of dwellings built from mammoth
bones was due to humans hunting alongside the
earliest domesticated dogs.
In May, Pat Shipman of Penn State University
took a fresh look at European archaeological
sites built with mammoth bones.
'One of the greatest puzzles about these sites is
how such large numbers of mammoths could
have been killed with the weapons available
during that time,' she said.
Professor Shipman used information about how
humans hunt with dogs to formulate a series of
testable predictions about these mammoth sites.
'Dogs help hunters find prey faster and more
often and dogs also can surround a large animal
and hold it in place by growling and charging
while hunters move in. Both of these effects
would increase hunting success,' she said.
'Large dogs like those identified by Germonpré
either can help carry the prey home or, by
guarding the carcass from other carnivores, can
make it possible for the hunters to camp at the kill
sites.'
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Pictured is a Gravettian Upper Paleolithic Venus
figure holding horn or cornucopia
Gravettian culture flourished 31,000 – 22,000
years ago in the European Upper Paleolithic
era.
The phase was characterised by a stone-tool
industry with small pointed blades used for biggame hunting, such as bison, horse, reindeer
and mammoth.
It is divided into two regional groups: the
western Gravettian, mostly known from cave
sites in France, and the eastern Gravettian, with
sites for mammoth hunters on the plains of
central Europe and Russia.
The culture appeared at a time when
Neanderthals were being displaced by modern
humans, who had entered Europe from Africa
and the Middle East some 15,000 years
before.
During this process, Neanderthals retreated to
the southern half of the Iberian Peninsula.
The Gravettian people are famous for the many
Venus figurines they created, which are widely
distributed in Europe.
Another famous prehistoric discovery of this
period are the hand stencils in Cosquer Cave
close to Marseilles.
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The study confirms that mammoths were a key component of the prehistoric diet in Europe 30,000 years ago,
and that dogs were already being looked after by humans (artist's impression pictured)
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