Eggshells and bones from baby
turkeys among earliest evidence for turkey domestication
Date: November 21, 2016
Source: Field Museum
The turkeys we'll be sitting down
to eat on Thursday have a history that goes way back. Archaeologists have
unearthed a clutch of domesticated turkey eggs used as a ritual offering 1,500
years ago in Oaxaca, Mexico -- some of the earliest evidence of turkey
domestication.
"Our research tells us that
turkeys had been domesticated by 400-500 AD," explains Field Museum
archaeologist Gary Feinman, one of the paper's authors. "People have made
guesses about turkey domestication based on the presence or absence of bones at
archaeological sites, but now we are bringing in classes of information that
were not available before. We're providing strong evidence to confirm prior
hypotheses." The results were published in an article in the Journal of
Archaeological Science: Reports.
Feinman, along with lead author
Heather Lapham from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and
co-author Linda Nicholas also of The Field Museum, discovered the eggs during
an excavation in Oaxaca that was home to the Zapotec people going back
thousands of years. "It was very exciting because it's very rare to find a
whole cluster of intact eggs. This was very unexpected," says Feinman.
"Heather Lapham is an
archaeologist who studies animal bones, and she knew immediately that we had found
five intact or unhatched eggs that were left as an offering alongside seven
newly hatched baby turkeys, of which only their tiny bones survived," says
Feinman. Scanning electron microscope analysis of the eggshells confirmed that
they were indeed laid by turkeys.
"The fact that we see a full
clutch of unhatched turkey eggs, along with other juvenile and adult turkey
bones nearby, tells us that these birds were domesticated," says Feinman.
"It helps to confirm historical information about the use of turkeys in
the area."
The eggs, according to Feinman,
were an offering of ritual significance to the Zapotec people. The Zapotec
people still live in Oaxaca today, and domesticated turkeys remain important to
them. "Turkeys are raised to eat, given as gifts, and used in
rituals," says Feinman. "The turkeys are used in the preparation of
food for birthdays, baptisms, weddings, and religious festivals."
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