| Goat busters track
domestication.(physiologic changes and evolution of goats into
a domesticated animal)(Brief Article)
Issue: April 8, 2000
People began to domesticate wild goats at least 10,000
years ago in the Zagros Mountains of western Iran, according
to a new study. It indicates that at that time, villagers in
the area experimented with ways of controlling herds. These
early domesticators primarily slaughtered male goats that had
not reached their reproductive prime, leaving mature males to
breed with a herd's adult females, say the researchers.
Goats in these early managed herds probably looked much
like wild goats, both physically and genetically, say Melinda
A. Zeder of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of
Natural History in Washington, D.C., and Brian Hesse of the
University of Alabama at Birmingham. Over time, isolation of
managed herds and the introduction of selective breeding
produced changes in domesticated goats, the two
anthropologists propose.
Some researchers have argued that declines in overall body
size of goat skeletons unearthed at two ancient village sites
in the Zagros Mountains reflect early domestication. However,
goats from these sites, Ganj Dareh and Ali Kosh, fall within
the size range of a sample of modern wild-goat skeletons,
Zeder found in a preliminary study.
The Ganj Dareh and Ali Kosh samples contain a large
proportion of bones from young males, the scientists report in
the March 24 SCIENCE. Previous investigators at the sites had
excluded these bones--which had not developed fully but still
were larger than comparable bones of fully grown females--from
body-size estimates for adult goats. Because more females than
males reached maturity, these calculations mistakenly
portrayed the villagers' animals as much smaller than wild
goats, Zeder and Hesse assert.
Evidence that people had primarily killed young male goats
came as no surprise to Hesse. He had previously theorized that
early herders mainly killed young males for meat and kept most
females and a few older males as breeding stock. In contrast,
hunters interested in a quicker return on their effort often
targeted the largest males in a herd or killed many animals at
once, Hesse had proposed.
The researchers determined that Ganj Dareh was inhabited
about 10,000 years ago, for a span of no more than 100 to 200
years. Settlement of Ali Kosh occurred 500 to 1,000 years
later and lasted about 500 years. Radiocarbon analyses
generated age estimates from tiny fragments of bone and
charred seeds found in a range of soil layers at both
sites.
Emergence of a warmer, wetter climate in western Asia
15,000 years ago instigated a spread of grasslands and a
resurgence of animals such as sheep, goats, and pigs, Zeder
holds. Soon, people there took the first steps toward
domestication by searching for ways to manage animal herds, in
her view.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group
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