Marine Hunting of Pinnipeds (Pinnipedia) on the Coats of the White Sea in the Eneolithic
Journal: Povolzhskaya Arkheologiya (The Volga River Region Archaeology) (Vol.3, No. 49)Publication Date: 2024-09-30
Authors : Askeyev I.V.; Zhul'nikov A.M.; Askeyev A.O.; Askeyev O.V.; Tarasov A.Yu.;
Page : 73-93
Keywords : archaeology; pinnipeds (Pinnipedia); seals; bone remains; marine hunting; Eneolithic; White Sea;
Abstract
This is a study of initial stages of adaptation of the ancient human population to the use of aquatic food supplies in the White Sea. The main aim of archaeozoological analysis was to study the processes of formation of faunal remains and strategies on seals hunting during the Eneolithic in the White Sea region. The archaeological source material consists of faunal remains recovered from two Eneolithic sites of the Kandalaksha bay. The results of archaeozoological studies confirmed the high importance of the ringed seal and harp seal in the hunting prey of the inhabitants of the studied sites. Eneolithic hunting strategies of the White Sea region were closely related to the behavioral and ecological patterns of seals. The seal hunt was based on a model of exploiting a massive seasonal resource. Hunting pressure on the ringed seal and harp seal populations was significant. Seals were the main suppliers of meat, skin and fat for the inhabitants of the Eneolithic sites of this part of Fennoscandia. The studies of the lithic tools from the Early Metal period settlements from Kandalaksha bay provide additional evidences of a specialized marine hunting. Apparently, in the Eneolithic (IV – III millennia calBC), the economic and cultural type of sea hunters was formed on the shores of the White Sea.
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