Identification des impacts de projectiles sur le squelette des grands ongulés |
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Authors: | Jean-Christophe Castel |
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Affiliation: | aDépartement d’archéozoologie, Muséum d’histoire naturelle, route de Malagnou 1, case postal 6434, 1211 Genève 6, Suisse |
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Abstract: | In the context of the collective research program “functional technology of solutrean points”, conducted from 1987 to 2000, more than 300 impacts were experimentally produced on ungulate carcasses (goat, cow, horse). Based on the classification of these types of impacts proposed by P. Morel in 1991, we can estimate that only the inclusions of point fragments in the bones remain diagnostic in most archaeological contexts. The other types, such as scrapings or splittings, can be confused with tool traces, carnivore tooth marks or postdepositional alterations. P. Morel has published the results for small herbivores, and we present our results here for large herbivores. More than 200 stigmata were observed on the carcasses of an adult cow and horse following experimental shots with solutrean projectiles (shouldered points, laurel leaf points and willow leaf points) and a few reindeer antler points. These traces are concentrated around the vital parts of the animals. The most common types are marginal scrapings and splittings, but implantations are more numerous than on small ungulate skeletons. This numerically significant body of data is derived from carefully controlled experiments. Indispensable for the interpretation of the stigmata observed on bones found in Paleolithic sites, such experiments contribute to our knowledge of the conditions prey exploitation and allow us to address questions concerning the fossilization of these traces and their apparent frequency. |
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Keywords: | Taphonomie Expérimentation Chasse Paléolithique supérieur Impact sur l’os |
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