2019
DOI: 10.1007/s10814-019-09142-9
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The Archaeology of Pig Domestication in Eurasia

Abstract: The multifaceted behavioral and ecological flexibility of pigs and wild boar (Sus scrofa) makes study of their domestication both complex and of broad anthropological significance. While recognizing contextual contingency, we propose several "pathways" to pig domestication. We also highlight the diversity of pig management practices. This diversity complicates zooarchaeological detection of management techniques employed by humans in the early steps of domestication, and we stress the need for multiple lines o… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 201 publications
(201 reference statements)
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“…This distinctive kind of mutualism that characterizes all three pathways of domestication is not restricted to humans and domestic livestock but is also observed in non-human species as well. There is for example a domestic relationship between leaf cutter ants and fungi that also resulted in behavioral, physiological, and morphological changes in both partners [82], as they are observed in the process of animal domestication by humans.…”
Section: Recent Findings In Archeology and Genetics Question Popular mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This distinctive kind of mutualism that characterizes all three pathways of domestication is not restricted to humans and domestic livestock but is also observed in non-human species as well. There is for example a domestic relationship between leaf cutter ants and fungi that also resulted in behavioral, physiological, and morphological changes in both partners [82], as they are observed in the process of animal domestication by humans.…”
Section: Recent Findings In Archeology and Genetics Question Popular mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genetic and zooarchaeological evidence indicates that pigs were domesticated from wild boars in multiple locations across Eurasia (Price and Hongo, forthcoming). This process began with people managing wild boar populations.…”
Section: The Domestication Of Pigsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet another example is provided by the rich diversity of human–pig associations in Melanesia. In mainland New Guinea, there is a broad spectrum of pig husbandry regimes, ranging from extensive to intensive (Dwyer 1996; Hide 2003; Price & Hongo 2019; Rosman & Rubel 1989; Townsend 1974; Yen 1991). In the former, evident mostly in lowland regions, village sows breed with feralised, wild‐living boars; in fact, domestic pigs are often not the result of any form of controlled breeding, but are feralised (‘wild') boars that people capture as piglets and hand‐rear in the village (Dwyer 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sows also give birth in the forest; hence, the carer of the gravid sow must track her to the well‐concealed birthing nest to retrieve the piglets when they are between 2 and 4 weeks old (Dwyer & Minnegal 2005). Much like dogs, pigs in the genus Sus are intelligent and inquisitive animals whose social behaviour is formed at an early age through filial imprinting (Price & Hongo 2019). After capturing piglets, Kubo women intervene in this imprinting process, isolating them from other wild‐living piglets and nurturing them constantly (including breastfeeding them) for the first 3–4 months, forming a close attachment between pig and caregiver that lasts until the animal is slaughtered (Dwyer & Minnegal 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%