Rodríguez-Hidalgo Antonio, Saladié Palmira, Ollé Andreu, Arsuaga Juan Luis, Bermúdez de Castro José María, Carbonell Eudald
Department of Prehistory, Complutense University, Prof. Aranguren s/n, 28040 Madrid, Spain; Institute of Evolution in Africa (IDEA), Madrid, Spain; Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social (IPHES), Tarragona, Spain.
Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social (IPHES), Tarragona, Spain; Àrea de Prehistòria, Universidat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Tarragona, Spain; GQP-CG, Grupo Quaternário e Pré-História do Centro de Geociências (uI&D 73 e FCT), Portugal; Unit Associated to Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Spain.
J Hum Evol. 2017 Apr;105:89-122. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.01.007. Epub 2017 Mar 21.
Zooarcheological research is an important tool in reconstructing subsistence, as well as for inferring relevant aspects regarding social behavior in the past. The organization of hunting parties, forms of predation (number and rate of animals slaughtered), and the technology used (tactics and tools) must be taken into account in the identification and classification of hunting methods in prehistory. The archeological recognition of communal hunting reflects an interest in evolutionary terms and their inherent implications for anticipatory capacities, social complexity, and the development of cognitive tools, such as articulated language. Late and Middle Paleolithic faunal assemblages in Europe have produced convincing evidence of communal hunting of large ungulates allowing for the formation of hypotheses concerning the skills of Neanderthals anatomically modern humans as social predators. However, the emergence of this cooperative behavior is not currently understood. Here, faunal analysis, based on traditional/long-established zooarcheological methods, of nearly 25,000 faunal remains from the "bison bone bed" layer of the TD10.2 sub-unit at Gran Dolina, Atapuerca (Spain) is presented. In addition, other datasets related to the archeo-stratigraphy, paleo-landscape, paleo-environmental proxies, lithic assemblage, and ethno-archeological information of communal hunting have been considered in order to adopt a holistic approach to an investigation of the subsistence strategies developed during deposition of the archeological remains. The results indicate a monospecific assemblage heavily dominated by axial bison elements. The abundance of anthropogenic modifications and the anatomical profile are in concordance with early primary access to carcasses and the development of systematic butchering focused on the exploitation of meat and fat for transportation of high-yield elements to somewhere out of the cave. Together with a catastrophic and seasonal mortality pattern, the results indicate the procurement of bison by communal hunting as early as circa 400 kyr. This suggests that the cognitive, social, and technological capabilities required for successful communal hunting were at least fully developed among the pre-Neanderthal paleodeme of Atapuerca during the Lower Paleolithic. Similarly, the early existence of mass communal hunting as a predation technique informs our understanding of the early emergence of predatory skills similar to those exhibited by modern communal hunters.
动物考古学研究是重建生计的重要工具,也是推断过去社会行为相关方面的重要工具。在确定和分类史前狩猎方法时,必须考虑狩猎群体的组织、捕食形式(被宰杀动物的数量和比率)以及所使用的技术(策略和工具)。对集体狩猎的考古学认识反映了从进化角度的兴趣及其对预期能力、社会复杂性以及认知工具(如清晰语言)发展的内在影响。欧洲旧石器时代晚期和中期的动物群组合提供了令人信服的证据,证明了对大型有蹄类动物的集体狩猎,这使得人们能够形成关于尼安德特人(解剖学上的现代人)作为社会捕食者技能的假设。然而,目前尚不清楚这种合作行为是如何出现的。在此,本文展示了基于传统/既定动物考古学方法,对来自西班牙阿塔普尔卡格兰多利纳TD10.2亚单元“野牛骨床”层近25000件动物遗骸的动物群分析。此外,还考虑了与考古地层学、古景观、古环境指标、石器组合以及集体狩猎的民族考古学信息相关的其他数据集,以便采用整体方法来研究在考古遗迹沉积期间所发展的生存策略。结果表明,该组合以单一物种为主,主要由轴部野牛元素主导。大量的人为改造和解剖学特征与早期对尸体的直接获取以及专注于利用肉和脂肪以便将高产元素运输出洞穴的系统屠宰的发展相一致。结合灾难性和季节性的死亡模式,结果表明早在约40万年前就通过集体狩猎获取野牛。这表明,成功进行集体狩猎所需的认知、社会和技术能力至少在旧石器时代早期阿塔普尔卡的前尼安德特古群体中已完全发展。同样,作为一种捕食技术,大规模集体狩猎的早期存在有助于我们理解与现代集体猎人所展现的类似捕食技能的早期出现。