铁器时代到后中世纪苏格兰的捕鲸

Y. van den Hurk, K. McGrath
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引用次数: 3

摘要

鲸类动物的遗骸在欧洲各地的考古遗址中都有发现,但在苏格兰尤其丰富。这些遗骸来自各个时期,经常被加工成人工制品或工具,包括砧板、斑块、梳子、钉子、颈套和穿孔的脊椎骨骺盘。目前仍不清楚哪些物种被捕捞,以及该地区的活跃捕鲸活动达到了何种程度。为了解决这些问题,我们对苏格兰五个地点(Jarlshof, Brough of Birsay, Quoygrew, Deerness和Freswick Links)的35个鲸类标本进行了质谱动物学(ZooMS)研究,时间从铁器时代到后中世纪时期。此外,对材料进行形态学分析,以优化ZooMS鉴定。发现的物种种类繁多,包括大量的Balaenidae sp和Globicephalinae sp。与欧洲西北部其他ZooMS研究相比,这些物种的标本数量同样高,还有长须鲸(Balaenoptera physalus)、抹香鲸(Phy-seter macrocephalus)和座头鲸(Megaptera novaeangliae)。此外,在苏格兰的标本中发现了一只灰鲸(Eschrichtius robustus),增加了越来越多的标本,表明灰鲸曾经在欧洲水域大量存在。此外,只有一种普通小须鲸(Balaenoptera acutorostrata)的标本被发现,尽管现代搁浅数据表明这是苏格兰水域最常见的大型鲸鱼物种。所发现的种类之多表明,机会性食腐可能是获取鲸类动物的主要方法,尽管历史和人种学资料表明,偶尔可能会进行两种不同形式的主动捕鲸。在Jarlshof发现的大量球形头蝇标本表明,在铁器时代,这里可能已经开始了驾车狩猎。查看补充资料:表1 |表2 |表3 |
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Whaling in Iron Age to post-medieval Scotland
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially abundant in Scotland. These remains originate from all periods and have often been worked into artefacts or tools, including chopping blocks, plaques, combs, pegs, snecks and perforated vertebral epiphyseal discs. It still remains unclear which species were exploited and to what extent active whaling was undertaken in the region. To address these questions Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry (ZooMS) was undertaken on 35 cetacean specimens from five sites in Scotland (Jarlshof, Brough of Birsay, Quoygrew, Deerness and Freswick Links), dating from the Iron Age to the post-medieval period. Furthermore, morphological analysis was performed on the material in order to optimise the ZooMS identifications. A large variety of species were identified, including high numbers of Balaenidae sp and Globicephalinae sp. Comparison with other ZooMS studies in north-western Europe revealed equally high specimen numbers for these species, but also fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus), sperm whale (Phy-seter macrocephalus) and humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae). Moreover, one grey whale (Eschrichtius robustus) was identified in the Scottish specimens, adding to an increasing number of specimens indicating that the grey whale was once abundant in European waters. Furthermore, only one specimen of the common minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) was identified, despite modern stranding data which suggests this is the most common large whale species in Scottish waters. The large variety of species identified suggests that opportunistic scavenging was likely the primary method of acquiring cetaceans, though historical and ethnographic sources suggest that two distinct forms of active whaling may have occasionally been undertaken. The high number of Globicephalinae specimens from Jarlshof raise the possibility that drive-hunting might have already been undertaken at the site during the Iron Age. View supplementary materials here: Table 1 | Table 2 | Table 3 |
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