TY - JOUR
T1 - Animal Indoor Penning in the Eastern Pyrenees
T2 - The Case-study of Late Iron Age Tossal de Baltarga, Cerdanya
AU - Portillo, Marta
AU - de Pablo, Joaquim Sisa López
AU - Oller, Joan
AU - Morera, Jordi
AU - Olesti, Oriol
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Association for Environmental Archaeology 2023.
PY - 2023/9/30
Y1 - 2023/9/30
N2 - Over the last decades, micro-archaeological and ethnoarchaeological approaches have demonstrated the importance of animal dung deposits for reconstructing past human lifeways, primarily within caves and rock-shelters. The case study of Tossal de Baltarga (eastern Pyrenees) provides evidence from simultaneous storage and penning, along with the in situ remains in anatomical connection of several ovicaprines and a horse within a building destroyed by fire, dating to the second half of the third century BC. The current study provides new evidence for animal management and organisation of space at the site through examination in micromorphological thin-section and integrated phytolith and dung spherulite analyses. Micromorphological results reveal spatial variations in dung accumulation, possibly related to differences in the use of space. Phytolith records further provide insights into herbivorous regimes, dominated by a range of grass matter suggested to derive from fodder and/or grazing through the penning lifetime. This integrated approach contributes to the understanding of depositional pathways and taphonomy of penning deposits within built environments, critical for the reconstruction of activity areas and practices related to animal management, foddering/grazing patterns, site formation processes, concepts of space within the settlement, health and the complexity of interactions between people and animals in mountain areas.
AB - Over the last decades, micro-archaeological and ethnoarchaeological approaches have demonstrated the importance of animal dung deposits for reconstructing past human lifeways, primarily within caves and rock-shelters. The case study of Tossal de Baltarga (eastern Pyrenees) provides evidence from simultaneous storage and penning, along with the in situ remains in anatomical connection of several ovicaprines and a horse within a building destroyed by fire, dating to the second half of the third century BC. The current study provides new evidence for animal management and organisation of space at the site through examination in micromorphological thin-section and integrated phytolith and dung spherulite analyses. Micromorphological results reveal spatial variations in dung accumulation, possibly related to differences in the use of space. Phytolith records further provide insights into herbivorous regimes, dominated by a range of grass matter suggested to derive from fodder and/or grazing through the penning lifetime. This integrated approach contributes to the understanding of depositional pathways and taphonomy of penning deposits within built environments, critical for the reconstruction of activity areas and practices related to animal management, foddering/grazing patterns, site formation processes, concepts of space within the settlement, health and the complexity of interactions between people and animals in mountain areas.
KW - dung spherulites
KW - Eastern Pyrenees
KW - Iron age
KW - livestock penning
KW - micromorphology
KW - phytoliths
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85173967982&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14614103.2023.2253072
DO - 10.1080/14614103.2023.2253072
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85173967982
SN - 1461-4103
JO - Environmental Archaeology
JF - Environmental Archaeology
ER -