TisILeclerc wrote:Whatever happened to the aurochs?
Didn't we mention the bones of aurochs found in the Orkneys?
Archaeologists working at the Links of Noltland, in Westray, have genetic proof that aurochs — the huge, prehistoric ancestor to modern cattle — were once found on the island. Aurochs were much larger than most modern domestic cattle, having a shoulder height of around two metres and weighing in at 1,000 kilograms. On the Scottish mainland, aurochs were probably extinct by the Bronze Age, but in Europe survived until the 17th century. However, the Westray aurochs — the first genetically verified identification of the animals in Orkney — were not native to the isles and had to have been brought in.
Hazel Moore, from Ease Archaeology, explained: “We have also been pursuing a parallel investigation into the genetic origins of the earliest domesticated animals, with a view to tracing not only the origins of the human population, but also the origin of their ‘farming package’, which might prove not to come from the same place.
“So far, this has revealed that Neolithic folk at the Links of Noltland kept both domesticated cattle and wild aurochs.”
A team from Basel and the University of Edinburgh analysed a group of 28 cattle skulls recovered from the ongoing Westray excavation. These skulls have been radiocarbon dated to between 3000BC and 2500BC. Fierce and unbiddable creatures, Hazel suggested that the aurochs may have been imported to breed particular characteristics into domestic herds.
http://www.orkneyjar.com/archaeology/20 ... d-westray/
My immediate reaction was to think this explanation smells like auroch-excrement. I wouldn't want a one-tonne wild auroch on my little wooden boat. Anyway, how would you get a wild auroch to obligingly climb onto your boat, and then stay still all the way to Orkney across open water?
But, hang on though, if the expert is correct, there must have been some big boats (wild auroch grade) between 3000BC and 2500BC. Like the Veneti-era boats, but even older.
Here's a list of domesticated animals, including guestimates of when they were domesticated.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_d ... ed_animalsIt looks like they are saying that all the larger four-legged types in Europe have been domesticated since c.4000BC. The only types more recent are varieties of imported birds like Turkeys.