Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Ingicco T., Amano N., Setiagama K., Moigne A. M., Budiman, Sémah Anne-Marie, Simanjuntak T., Semah F. (2021). From food to grave good a reply to Nijman. Current Anthropology, 62 (3), p. 387-388. ISSN 0011-3204.

Titre du document
From food to grave good a reply to Nijman
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000655663500008
Auteurs
Ingicco T., Amano N., Setiagama K., Moigne A. M., Budiman, Sémah Anne-Marie, Simanjuntak T., Semah F.
Source
Current Anthropology, 2021, 62 (3), p. 387-388 ISSN 0011-3204
Nonhuman primates are among the most common taxa represented in Holocene faunal assemblages from Java. In this paper, we examined patterns of Cercopithecidae exploitation, from acquisition through processing, in two cave sites in eastern Java's Gunung Sewu region: Song Terus and Braholo Cave. Trachypithecus auratus accounts for more than 90% of the nonhuman primate remains recorded, suggesting deliberate targeting of this taxon over other monkey species. Skeletal element representation and the placement of butchery marks allowed us to reconstruct how monkey carcasses were processed. The consistency in the placement of butchery marks is highly suggestive of a systematic butchery process as well as of an intimate knowledge of monkey anatomy. In addition to being the major source of protein for the human inhabitants of the sites, leaf monkeys were also an important source of materials for tool and ornament manufacture. It further appears that leaf monkeys played a significant role in rituals, as several remains were found in association with a human inhumation. In this paper we describe the full chaine operatoire applied in monkey processing, from acquisition to food processing to grave goods, developed by the inhabitants of the Gunung Sewu from the early Holocene onward.
Plan de classement
Société, développement social [106]
Identifiant IRD
PAR00022742
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