2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2018.02.030
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Isotopic evidence for ceremonial provisioning of Late Bronze age khirigsuurs with horses from diverse geographic locales

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Cited by 24 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Although this conclusion does not exclude the long-distance mobility of some individuals, it may suggest that the importance of local social and demographic organisation has sometimes been underestimated. This conclusion also somewhat disagrees with recent strontium isotope analysis suggesting that Bronze Age horses from khirgisuurs located in the Khanuy Valley came from geographically distant locales (Makarewicz et al 2018), indicating social networks active over great distances. Research comparing the isotopic signature of horse teeth with the mapping of local bioavailable strontium is required to assess this more fully.…”
Section: Bayesian Modellingcontrasting
confidence: 88%
“…Although this conclusion does not exclude the long-distance mobility of some individuals, it may suggest that the importance of local social and demographic organisation has sometimes been underestimated. This conclusion also somewhat disagrees with recent strontium isotope analysis suggesting that Bronze Age horses from khirgisuurs located in the Khanuy Valley came from geographically distant locales (Makarewicz et al 2018), indicating social networks active over great distances. Research comparing the isotopic signature of horse teeth with the mapping of local bioavailable strontium is required to assess this more fully.…”
Section: Bayesian Modellingcontrasting
confidence: 88%
“…Horse tail hairs showed a cyclic seasonal pattern characterized by high winter and low summer δ 13 C diet values (Figure A). This pattern has been described elsewhere in the literature, and is often interpreted as reflecting a seasonal change in the relative proportion of C 3 vs C 4 plants in the diet, either through direct consumption of perennial C 4 plants during winter, C 4 winter foddering, or because of animal altitudinal mobility and the decrease in the relative abundance of C 4 taxa with increasing elevation . Here, the average δ 13 C diet values range between −30.2‰ and −24.2‰, suggesting that the horses' diet was essentially composed of C 3 plants as expected for a mountainous steppe environment in central Asia .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…In both cases, horse sacrifices likely occurred within relatively compressed time spans measuring several decades and falling into the period between 1050 and 900 BC. In addition, recent isotopic analyses reveal that the respective horses at the Urt Bulagyn site were not of local origin but came from regions surrounding the Khanui valley, affirming the use of horse feasting and sacrifice in inter-area visitation and regional alliance building (Makarewicz et al 2018). Although it is not yet widely recognized, these horse-related rituals at the largest of khirisguur sites probably set the precedent for elite sites like Arzhan 1 only a few centuries later (Hayashi 2013;Honeychurch 2015: 174-175).…”
Section: Regional Transport Ritual and Exchange 1200-900 Bcmentioning
confidence: 98%