. Animal domestication : an archeological interpretation. Sweet Briar College; Magdalenian culture; Domestication; Domestic animals. ? 54-. Figure i. E*tenai«>n op tundra end tuno/ra forest during Igst (redrawn froivi Sutzer lQ7i and SCoUisA deog. ^fsffgz/ne) Srckic bundra I Vj^gj • tundra forest ( | the Paris Basin (Leroi-Gourhan 1972:199). The brown hare was a staple in the diet of the wolf, also well represented in the fossil record of North-Central France (Leroi-Gourhan 1972:198). He seems to have been slightly smaller than the present day wolf, but the association of his remains with t


. Animal domestication : an archeological interpretation. Sweet Briar College; Magdalenian culture; Domestication; Domestic animals. ? 54-. Figure i. E*tenai«>n op tundra end tuno/ra forest during Igst (redrawn froivi Sutzer lQ7i and SCoUisA deog. ^fsffgz/ne) Srckic bundra I Vj^gj • tundra forest ( | the Paris Basin (Leroi-Gourhan 1972:199). The brown hare was a staple in the diet of the wolf, also well represented in the fossil record of North-Central France (Leroi-Gourhan 1972:198). He seems to have been slightly smaller than the present day wolf, but the association of his remains with those of certain other animals suspected of being his prey, indicates that his habits have not changed. Like the wolf, the hyena is a specialized carnivore, and as expected is found to have occupied the same regions as the wolf (Kurten 1968). Other tundra dwellers were the wooly mammoth and the primitive horse. These are represented at the Basin sites in insignificant number, how-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Dinegar, Harriet Caroline.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, booksubjectdomest, booksubjectsweetbriarcollege