Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures, Mississippi State University, P.O. Box AR, Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2012 Jul;22(5):1446-59. doi: 10.1890/11-1943.1.
Large assemblages of animal bones and/or shells from archaeological sites can provide data valuable for modern conservation efforts, e.g., by providing accurate historical baselines for species reintroductions or habitat restoration. Such data are underused by natural scientists, partly due to assumptions that archaeological materials are too biased by prehistoric human actions (the so-called "cultural filter") to accurately reflect past biotic communities. In order to address many paleobiological, archaeological, or applied research questions, data on past species, communities, and populations must first be demonstrated to be representative at the appropriate level. We discuss different ways in which one kind of cultural bias, human transport of specimens, can be tested at different scales, using freshwater mussel shells from prehistoric sites in the Tombigbee River basin of Mississippi and Alabama to show how representativeness of samples can be assessed.
大量的动物骨骼和/或贝壳组合来自考古遗址,可以为现代保护工作提供有价值的数据,例如,为物种重新引入或栖息地恢复提供准确的历史基线。这些数据并没有被自然科学家充分利用,部分原因是人们认为考古材料受到史前人类活动的影响太大(所谓的“文化过滤”),以至于无法准确反映过去的生物群落。为了解决许多古生物学、考古学或应用研究的问题,首先必须证明过去物种、群落和种群的数据在适当的水平上具有代表性。我们讨论了在不同的尺度上测试一种文化偏见(即人类运输标本)的不同方法,使用来自密西西比州和阿拉巴马州的 Tombigbee 河流域史前遗址的淡水贻贝贝壳,展示了如何评估样本的代表性。