The animal remains from Calle Almendralejo nr. 41 (M´erida, Spain): A contribution to our understanding of animal husbandry in the capital of Roman Lusitania
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Zooarchaeology Iberian Peninsula Cattle Camelidae
Date
2024-05-25Referencia bibliográfica
C. Detry et al. 699 (2024) 65–83. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2024.05.004]
Patrocinador
Foundation for Science and Technology (Portugal) through the project Broman - Exploitation and consumption of biological resources in western Iberia during Roman times (PTDC/HAR-ARQ/4909/2020); Cleia Detry’s post-doctoral grant with the reference: SFRH/BPD/43911/2008; _TEXLUS project. THE ECONOMY OF TEXTILE CRAFT IN ROMAN LUSITANIA_ - PID2022-136663NB-I00 - funded by the Knowledge Generation Project Program of the Ministry of Science and Innovation, call 2022Résumé
diet and animal management. Here we present the description of the fauna found in a dump next to the northern
part of the Roman wall, which also includes some contexts of ritual nature, dated to the 1st century AD until the
beginning of 5th century AD. The osteological remains of animals have shown that most of them come from food
waste and worked bones. We can see that there is a temporal evolution in the use of that space and in the species
used, with smaller animals being preferred in the first phase and cattle being more abundant in the 4th century.
Some improvement indicators were also identified, as would be expected for a provincial capital, such as Emerita
Augusta. Also, ritual burials of numerous dogs as well as a skeleton of the oldest specimen in Iberia of Egyptian
mongoose, camel and an edible dormouse, constitute interesting discoveries in this assemblage, demonstrating
that this is an exceptional sample.