TY - JOUR
T1 - Megafauna in a continent of small game
T2 - Archaeological implications of Martu Camel hunting in Australia's Western Desert
AU - Bird, Douglas W.
AU - Codding, Brian F.
AU - Bliege Bird, Rebecca
AU - Zeanah, David W.
AU - Taylor, Curtis J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Most of all, we wish to thank our Martu friends and family in Parnngurr, Punmu, and Kunawarritji. They have supported us and the Martu Ecological Anthropology Project and Comparative Wests Project for many years, with tremendous tenacity in their commitment to their country and Law. Any validity is theirs, the mistakes are ours. So many others have contributed directly to the Martu project, including Brooke Scelza, Eric Smith, Christopher Parker, Peter Kauhanen, Elspeth Ready, Gabrielle Sullivan, and of course Bob and Myrna Tonkinson, Peter Veth, and Jo McDonald, without whom DWB and RBB would never have been introduced to the Martu community. Many thanks to Don Hankins, Doug McCauley, Guy Bar-Oz, Dani Nadel, and two anonymous reviewers for their productive critiques and comments that significantly improved this article. We also owe a good deal of intellectual debt to James O'Connell, Kristen Hawkes, and Jamie Jones. This work was supported by generous grants from the National Science Foundation ( BCS -0127681 and 0314406 ) and the Environmental Ventures Project in the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University .
PY - 2013/5/29
Y1 - 2013/5/29
N2 - Archaeologists often assume that large ungulates are inherently highly ranked prey because of their size, especially attractive to hunters using sophisticated capture technologies common after the late Pleistocene. Between 1840 and 1907, over 10,000 dromedary camels were imported to Australia, and today feral populations number well over a million. Although contemporary Aboriginal hunters in Australia''s Western and Central Deserts regularly encounter camels, they rarely pursue them. We present data on camel encounter and pursuit rates, with comparisons of energetic search and handling efficiency relative to other foraging options among Martu, the Traditional Owners of a large region of the Western Desert. We then explore some hypotheses concerning the determinants of prey rank and the technological and social contexts that influence resource value. In some respects the case runs counter to common expectations about hunting large ungulates, and highlights the special kinds of opportunity costs that large game acquisition might entail in many contexts. The data should therefore provide insight into the socio-ecological contexts of large ungulate hunting and its archaeological signatures.
AB - Archaeologists often assume that large ungulates are inherently highly ranked prey because of their size, especially attractive to hunters using sophisticated capture technologies common after the late Pleistocene. Between 1840 and 1907, over 10,000 dromedary camels were imported to Australia, and today feral populations number well over a million. Although contemporary Aboriginal hunters in Australia''s Western and Central Deserts regularly encounter camels, they rarely pursue them. We present data on camel encounter and pursuit rates, with comparisons of energetic search and handling efficiency relative to other foraging options among Martu, the Traditional Owners of a large region of the Western Desert. We then explore some hypotheses concerning the determinants of prey rank and the technological and social contexts that influence resource value. In some respects the case runs counter to common expectations about hunting large ungulates, and highlights the special kinds of opportunity costs that large game acquisition might entail in many contexts. The data should therefore provide insight into the socio-ecological contexts of large ungulate hunting and its archaeological signatures.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.quaint.2013.01.011
DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2013.01.011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84892435571
SN - 1040-6182
VL - 297
SP - 155
EP - 166
JO - Quaternary International
JF - Quaternary International
ER -