Eprint Objects

Eprint 710

eprintid 710
rev_number 20
eprint_status archive
userid 1307
dir 00/00/00/07/10
datestamp 2011-04-20 10:34:04
lastmod 2011-07-04 09:19:59
status_changed 2011-05-13 13:27:33
type thesis
metadata_visibility show
item_issues_count 0
creators DREW, CARRIE,ANN
supervisors
Rowley-Conwy Peter p.a.rowley-conwy@durham.ac.uk
title Pigs from six medieval sites in Flanders: A multiple methodological approach to the study of their husbandry development
full_text_status public
keywords PhD by Research, pig, archaeology, husbandry, flanders, stress, dental microwear, linear enamel hypoplasia, pathologies, teeth, stalling, pannage
abstract This study considers the effects that variations in living conditions have on animals, in particular pigs, and how these differences can be examined using the archaeological record. A wider theme examines whether changes in the husbandry of animals can be understood more clearly and recognised more accurately by employing recently developing techniques and whether any of these could be beneficial to use as standard practice. It investigates how, using a much wider than normal range of approaches zooarchaeological evidence at archaeological sites can be used to answer questions about husbandry in a much better way than any of the approaches in isolation. This research used six key faunal assemblages from sites in Western Flanders as case studies to investigate these questions, with a particular focus reserved for pigs. The sites used for the primary research comprised Raversijde (15th century AD), Koekelare (15th century AD), Ename (14th century AD), Londerzeel (13th-14th centuries AD), Veurne (10th-11th centuries AD) and Oudenberg (4th century AD), all sites from Western Flanders and predominantly dating to the medieval period. The sites exhibited differences in both physical location and social context which were believed likely to explain any variations husbandry strategies should they exist. Rsults showed that, as population pressures increased during the early modern period, a nuanced change in pig-keeping from pannage to stall-keeping occurred. It has been practically impossible to identify this change from the archaeological record through traditional means. At Raversijde, in particular the type of pig-keeping being employed was clearly determined as stall-keeping, especially seen through the high frequency of enamel hypoplasias, indicating stress, but the spacing of teeth in the jaws indicated good nourishment in general. The techniques utilised in this project include dental microwear, linear enamel hypoplasia, and identification of pathologies or anomalies in both teeth and post-cranial elements, set alongside more traditional examinations of both mandibular and post-cranial elements. This provided an in-depth consideration of how recent scientific developments and established standard zooarchaeological techniques could be integrated, and also showed the potential in exploring further methodologies as standard for such sites. As well as successfully differentiating husbandry practices in the various sites examined, the research also highlighted the necessity to explore further what is meant by a ‘typical’ domestic pig.
date 2010
institution Durham University
thesis_type Doctoral
thesis_qualification_name PhD
department_dur
DDD6
documents
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/710/1/Thesis.pdf (20366380 bytes)