The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California

<p>Domesticated dogs (<em>Canis familiaris</em>) are an important human companion around the world and have long been a focus of archaeological research. Osteometric analysis of six dogs from a Late Holocene Chumash village on Santa Rosa Island, California indicates that adults, ju...

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Main Authors: Courtney Hofman, Torben Rick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society of Ethnobiology 2014-05-01
Series:Ethnobiology Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index.php/ebl/article/view/144
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spelling doaj-56540ce9b1294d65af12e2e92dd5d3322020-11-25T00:29:25ZengSociety of EthnobiologyEthnobiology Letters2159-81262014-05-015010.14237/ebl.5.2014.144101The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, CaliforniaCourtney Hofman0Torben Rick1University of MarylandSmithsonian Institution<p>Domesticated dogs (<em>Canis familiaris</em>) are an important human companion around the world and have long been a focus of archaeological research. Osteometric analysis of six dogs from a Late Holocene Chumash village on Santa Rosa Island, California indicates that adults, juvenile/young adults, and a puppy were present. Similar to dogs on other Channel Islands, these dogs fall into the large Indian dog category, standing some 43-54 cm tall, with mesaticephalic or mild brachycephalic facial characteristics. No cutmarks were found on the bones, but one of the mandibles was burned. The CA-SRI-2 dogs appear to have eaten high trophic marine foods similar to what humans consumed, documenting the close bond between dogs and humans on the Channel Islands and broader North American Pacific Coast.<em> </em></p>http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index.php/ebl/article/view/144Channel IslandsDomesticationHunter-GatherersMorphometricsZooarchaeology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Courtney Hofman
Torben Rick
spellingShingle Courtney Hofman
Torben Rick
The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
Ethnobiology Letters
Channel Islands
Domestication
Hunter-Gatherers
Morphometrics
Zooarchaeology
author_facet Courtney Hofman
Torben Rick
author_sort Courtney Hofman
title The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
title_short The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
title_full The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
title_fullStr The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
title_full_unstemmed The Dogs of CA-SRI-2: Osteometry of Canis familiaris from Santa Rosa Island, California
title_sort dogs of ca-sri-2: osteometry of canis familiaris from santa rosa island, california
publisher Society of Ethnobiology
series Ethnobiology Letters
issn 2159-8126
publishDate 2014-05-01
description <p>Domesticated dogs (<em>Canis familiaris</em>) are an important human companion around the world and have long been a focus of archaeological research. Osteometric analysis of six dogs from a Late Holocene Chumash village on Santa Rosa Island, California indicates that adults, juvenile/young adults, and a puppy were present. Similar to dogs on other Channel Islands, these dogs fall into the large Indian dog category, standing some 43-54 cm tall, with mesaticephalic or mild brachycephalic facial characteristics. No cutmarks were found on the bones, but one of the mandibles was burned. The CA-SRI-2 dogs appear to have eaten high trophic marine foods similar to what humans consumed, documenting the close bond between dogs and humans on the Channel Islands and broader North American Pacific Coast.<em> </em></p>
topic Channel Islands
Domestication
Hunter-Gatherers
Morphometrics
Zooarchaeology
url http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index.php/ebl/article/view/144
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