TY - JOUR
T1 - Faunal remains from Ojakly, a Late Bronze Age mobile pastoralist campsite in the Murghab region, Turkmenistan
AU - Rouse, Lynne M.
AU - Woldekiros, Helina S.
AU - Cerasetti, Barbara
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/8
Y1 - 2022/8
N2 - The publication of data relevant to prehistoric socio-economies in southern Central Asia is growing, and it intersects with long-standing questions about how mixed farming-herding subsistence economies were organized on local and regional scales. We present new faunal data from the campsite of Ojakly in south-central Turkmenistan, dated to the Late Bronze Age (1900–1500 BCE). We situate the zooarchaeological data within the site's overall excavation results and against similarly-contextualized fauna and archaeological remains from culturally-related sites, particularly those reported from the BMAC/Oxus site of Gonur-depe. Despite some overlaps in the domestic animal species utilized at Ojakly and at nearby farming-focused sites in the Murghab, there is a clear contrast in terms of the subsistence focus and practices, beyond what would be expected if these groups were specialized economic sub-sets of a single socio-cultural tradition. The faunal patterns at Ojakly are consistent with a pastoral population that exclusively managed mixed herds as a full-time subsistence strategy. The analysis presented here fits within the vein of identifying localized socio-economic adaptations of mobile pastoralists, especially as they blur traditional notions of “nomadic” and “farming” economies. At the same time, they add to larger datasets of temporal and regional relevance, and they are discussed within broader patterns known from published material.
AB - The publication of data relevant to prehistoric socio-economies in southern Central Asia is growing, and it intersects with long-standing questions about how mixed farming-herding subsistence economies were organized on local and regional scales. We present new faunal data from the campsite of Ojakly in south-central Turkmenistan, dated to the Late Bronze Age (1900–1500 BCE). We situate the zooarchaeological data within the site's overall excavation results and against similarly-contextualized fauna and archaeological remains from culturally-related sites, particularly those reported from the BMAC/Oxus site of Gonur-depe. Despite some overlaps in the domestic animal species utilized at Ojakly and at nearby farming-focused sites in the Murghab, there is a clear contrast in terms of the subsistence focus and practices, beyond what would be expected if these groups were specialized economic sub-sets of a single socio-cultural tradition. The faunal patterns at Ojakly are consistent with a pastoral population that exclusively managed mixed herds as a full-time subsistence strategy. The analysis presented here fits within the vein of identifying localized socio-economic adaptations of mobile pastoralists, especially as they blur traditional notions of “nomadic” and “farming” economies. At the same time, they add to larger datasets of temporal and regional relevance, and they are discussed within broader patterns known from published material.
KW - Animal use
KW - Bronze Age
KW - Central Asia
KW - Herding strategies
KW - Sheep/goat pastoralism
KW - Subsistence economy
KW - Zooarchaeology
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85133228297
U2 - 10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103531
DO - 10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103531
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85133228297
SN - 2352-409X
VL - 44
JO - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
JF - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
M1 - 103531
ER -