Abstract
AbstractZooarchaeologists investigate past interactions between animals, humans, and their environments by analyzing the remains of archaeological fauna. Age-at-death distributions are fundamental to faunal analysis and are often estimated by comparing exposed dentine patterns to standardized tooth wear stages that have been associated with relative age classes. We present Bubona, an international dataset of dental wear patterns and associated broad age classes in archaeological cattle mandibles. Our open-access dataset of 1460 data entries from nine counties is being used to create tooth-type specific reference tables of probable age class attribution for cattle mandibles lacking complete dentition. Bubona is a valuable resource for the innovation of new systems of age estimation for cattle and it is the creators hope that researchers will continue to both help expand the dataset by contributing their own data, as well as utilize the data to refine and innovate age-at-death estimation methods.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference68 articles.
1. Davis, S. J. The archaeology of animals. Routledge (2012).
2. Klein, R. G. & Cruz-Uribe, K. The analysis of animal bones from archeological sites. University of Chicago press (1984).
3. Reitz, E. J. & Wing, E. S. (2008). Zooarchaeology. Cambridge University Press.
4. Hillson, S. Teeth. Cambridge university press (2005).
5. Grant. A. The animal bones. In: Cunliffe, B. (ed.), Excavations at Portchester Castle. Volume I; Roman. London: Society of Antiquaries, pp. 378–408 (1975).