Exploring the Arrival of Domestic Cats in the Americas

IF 2.7 1区 历史学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Martin H. Welker, John R. Bratten, Eric Guiry
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Abstract

Domestic cats have lived alongside human communities for thousands of years, hunting rats, mice, and other pests and serving as pets and a source of pelts and meat. Cats have received limited archaeological attention because their independence limits direct insight into human societies. An adult and juvenile cat recovered from the Emanuel Point wreck 2 (EP2) reflect what are, most likely, the earliest cats in what is now the United States. Zooarchaeological analyses of these and other archaeological cats in the Americas demonstrate that cats ranged substantially in size: some were comparable to modern house cats, and others were much smaller. Isotopic analyses of the adult cat from EP2 provides insight into early shipboard cat behavior and their diet, which appears to have focused on consumption of fish and possibly domestic meat. Cats accompanied sailors on ships where they were relied on to hunt rats and mice that were infesting ships’ holds. Interestingly, based on these isotopic results, the adult cat from EP2 does not seem to have relied heavily on rats as a source of food. These pests were unintentionally introduced to the New World, and cats would have followed, hunting both native and invasive pests.

探索家猫在美洲的到来
家猫与人类一起生活了几千年,它们捕食老鼠和其他害虫,作为宠物和毛皮和肉的来源。猫在考古学上受到的关注有限,因为它们的独立性限制了对人类社会的直接洞察。从伊曼纽尔角沉船(EP2)中发现的一只成年猫和一只幼年猫很可能是现在美国最早的猫。动物考古学对这些和其他在美洲发现的猫科动物的分析表明,猫科动物的体型差别很大:有些与现代家猫相当,有些则要小得多。对EP2成年猫的同位素分析提供了对早期船上猫行为和饮食的深入了解,它们似乎主要吃鱼,可能还有家禽肉。在船上,水手们依靠猫来捕捉在船舱里出没的老鼠。有趣的是,根据这些同位素结果,EP2的成年猫似乎并不严重依赖老鼠作为食物来源。这些害虫是无意中被引入新大陆的,猫也会跟着进来,捕食本地和入侵的害虫。
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来源期刊
American Antiquity
American Antiquity Multiple-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
95
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