Li Yue, Cheng Ruoxin, Huang Zexian, Mao Xiaolu, Liu Kexin, Wang Qianwen, Hou Furen, Mao Ruilin, Zhang Chengrui
School of Cultural Heritage, Northwest University, Xi'an 710127, China.
School of Sociology and Anthropology, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China.
Animals (Basel). 2023 Dec 8;13(24):3794. doi: 10.3390/ani13243794.
The late second and first millennium BC witnessed extensive economic, cultural, and political exchanges between pastoralists and sedentary farming states in East Asia. Decades of archaeological fieldwork across northern China have revealed a large number of burial sites associated with pastoralists during the first millennium BC. These sites were characterized by the inhumation of specific animal parts in burials, predominantly the skulls and hooves of sheep, goats, cattle, and horses. However, the selection preference for these animals and how they were integrated into the mortuary contexts of these pastoral societies remain poorly investigated. Here, we report a preliminary analysis of caprine remains from 70 burials at the site of Dunping in the southern Gansu region of northwestern China, dated to approximately the seventh to fourth centuries BC. Based on an examination of species composition, post-depositional effects, traces of human alteration, skeletal element representation, and age at death, we discussed the selection, slaughtering, and inhumation of caprines concerning the mortuary practices at the site. Comparisons between Dunping and several other contemporaneous burial sites in neighboring regions, specifically in terms of the mortality profiles, further highlight distinct patterns in the selection of caprines for mortuary purposes among pastoral societies. These differences suggest varying degrees of emphasis placed on the economic and social significance attributed to caprines. Our findings provide new insights into the roles that caprines played in both ritual performances and subsistence practices among pastoralists in East Asia during the first millennium BC.
公元前二千纪晚期和一千纪见证了东亚游牧民族与定居农耕国家之间广泛的经济、文化和政治交流。在中国北方进行的数十年考古实地调查揭示了公元前一千纪大量与游牧民族相关的墓葬遗址。这些遗址的特点是墓葬中埋葬特定的动物部位,主要是绵羊、山羊、牛和马的头骨和蹄子。然而,对于这些动物的选择偏好以及它们如何融入这些游牧社会的丧葬情境,仍鲜有研究。在此,我们报告了对中国西北甘肃南部地区墩坪遗址70座墓葬中羊科动物遗骸的初步分析,这些墓葬的年代约为公元前7世纪至4世纪。通过对物种组成、埋藏后影响、人类改变痕迹、骨骼元素呈现以及死亡年龄的考察,我们探讨了与该遗址丧葬习俗相关的羊科动物的选择、屠宰和埋葬情况。将墩坪与邻近地区其他几个同期墓葬遗址进行比较,特别是在死亡情况方面,进一步凸显了游牧社会在选择用于丧葬目的的羊科动物方面的不同模式。这些差异表明对羊科动物所具有的经济和社会意义的重视程度各不相同。我们的研究结果为公元前一千纪东亚游牧民族中羊科动物在仪式表演和生计实践中所起的作用提供了新的见解。