2022
DOI: 10.3390/heritage5040199
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What about Exotic Species? Significance of Remains of Strange and Alien Animals in the Baltic Sea Region, Focusing on the Period from the Viking Age to High Medieval Times (800–1300 CE)

Abstract: During the Viking era and the Middle Ages, in the Baltic Sea area, the remains of alien animal species are found rarely but recurrently. These species, which were previously widely distributed in other regions, were originally considered “exotic” by the local people of the Baltic Sea region. Conversely, “exotic” was also used to describe the last local specimens of those indigenous species that had become very rare over time. Other categories of exotic animals can be defined: the first specimens of domesticate… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Of particular importance is a complete skeleton of a gyrfalcon (here, an exotic species; cf. [48]), found together with a bell at the medieval French royal seat, which was unearthed beneath the present Louvre [49]. But, notably, these finds do not speak for themselves, they can only be understood in a broader context.…”
Section: Birds Of Preymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of particular importance is a complete skeleton of a gyrfalcon (here, an exotic species; cf. [48]), found together with a bell at the medieval French royal seat, which was unearthed beneath the present Louvre [49]. But, notably, these finds do not speak for themselves, they can only be understood in a broader context.…”
Section: Birds Of Preymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Europe 15-18 that attracted a variety of new rodent and bird species (e.g., European hamster Cricetus cricetus 19 , white stork Ciconia ciconia 20 , grey partridge Perdix perdix 21 ) originally native to the steppe further east or south. Some of these species could have been natural reservoirs and vectors of Y. pestis 1 , but if so, how could they have transmitted the bacterium to humans?…”
Section: During the Ln Woodland Clearance Increasingly Created Open L...mentioning
confidence: 99%