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  4. Dogs under urbanization: Isotopic insight from the Bronze Age Central Plains of China (ca. 2000–1000 BCE)
 
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Dogs under urbanization: Isotopic insight from the Bronze Age Central Plains of China (ca. 2000–1000 BCE)

Journal
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
Journal Volume
75
ISSN
0278-4165
Date Issued
2024-09
Author(s)
Xinyi Ouyang
Zhipeng Li
DAVID JOEL COHEN  
Xiaohong Wu
DOI
10.1016/j.jaa.2024.101608
URI
https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/719731
https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85197404878&origin=resultslist
Abstract
Abstract: Although dogs played multifaceted roles during the early stages of urbanization in China’s Central Plains, research remains limited concerning the management of dogs, the dynamics of human–dog relationships, and dogs’ entanglements with the political economy, ritual, and daily life. Here, we compare stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data from 95 dogs and associated human skeletons from 15 Late Neolithic – Bronze Age sites. Results show two distinct dietary patterns in dogs. Early sites (Xinzhai-Erlitou period, 1900–1520 BCE) show more variability in dog diets, indicative of looser approaches to dog management. Later sites (Late Shang-Western Zhou periods, 1320–770 BCE) show a widespread, homogeneous diet among dogs characterized by higher consumption of C4 millet (greater than in humans’ diets), suggesting the possibility of the emergence of specialized, broadly shared dog management practices linked to increased ritual use of dogs. This study also underscores the complexity of management practices, which would have been influenced by site-specific conditions, including environment and available resources, the site’s position in hierarchical settlement networks, and the varying roles of the dogs. Importantly, this study demonstrates that the comparison of isotopic data from broad temporal and spatial contexts can shed light on animal management practices in early urban economic systems and political economies.
Subjects
Chinese Bronze Age
Dogs
Stable isotopes
Diets
Urbanization
Animal management
SDGs

[SDGs]SDG11

Publisher
Elsevier BV
Description
Article number: 101608
Type
journal article

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