Interesting... here (Btw, I love the last line - "non-economic connection!!"):
"Mather and colleagues present the case for the red fox predating domesticated wolves in a recent research summary in Plos One. This research team includes members from the University of Cambridge in the UK as well as the University of Toronto. Using findings from burial grounds in what is now northern Jordan, they lay out the evidence that the red fox predates the wolf as man's domesticated canine.
Seven human grave sites have been examined in the Uyun al-Hamman region between the Transjordanian Highlands and the Jordan valley. The key elements from these findings include:
In summary, the research team feels these recent findings support an earlier "non-economic connections between people and animals".
"Mather and colleagues present the case for the red fox predating domesticated wolves in a recent research summary in Plos One. This research team includes members from the University of Cambridge in the UK as well as the University of Toronto. Using findings from burial grounds in what is now northern Jordan, they lay out the evidence that the red fox predates the wolf as man's domesticated canine.
Seven human grave sites have been examined in the Uyun al-Hamman region between the Transjordanian Highlands and the Jordan valley. The key elements from these findings include:
- Red fox skulls and bones are noted in several burial sites in proximity to human remains
- The proximity and manner of red fox bones suggest intentional placement rather than coincidence
- Some human bones were re-interred with movement and replacement of red fox bones in the new grave
- This re-burial process suggests a personal relationship between the deceased human and a specific red fox--the transfer may have indicated an attempt that "the dead person would continue to have the fox with him or her in the afterlife"
- The pattern of remains are not consistent with some secondary process such as use the red fox as a pelt or as part of consumption of the animal
- The carbon dating data suggest this area and this burial site pre-dated by thousands of years the earliest known burial sites that include domesticated wolves
- Later grave sites show humans being buried with dogs supporting an emotional tie with social, ideological or symbolic significance
In summary, the research team feels these recent findings support an earlier "non-economic connections between people and animals".
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