Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 90

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 90
George Hambrecht Cattle M3 Wear * # of elements Light Wear Figure 3. Cattle M3 wear Medium Wear Wear State + Number of Specimens Heavy Wear In order to lessen the “noise” from such possible variables the fusion state of selected long bones must be exam- ined as well. These long bones reinforce the idea that these cattle lived beyond their third year, but not much longer than their fifth year (Fig. 5). As can be seen from figure 5, 62% of the cattle femurs in this assemblage had fused distal ends by the time they were slaughtered. 38% were unfused, the largest proportion of long bone fusion in this assemblage. As this end of the femur does not fuse until the second half of the animals’ third year of life, this pattern of long bone fusion suggests that the majority were killed off somewhere around that age. Both the bone fusion and tooth wear data strongly point to cattle that were slaughtered within their third and fifth years of life. This mortality pat- tern is more indicative of a beef cat- tle economy than of a dairy economy. A lifespan between three and five years would usually take them to or near the peak of their growth curve, before they could become effective milk producers but close to the point where further feed- ing produced little or no increase in car- cass size (Trow-Smith, 1951). In contrast, in zooarchaeological assemblages of less wealthy, though by no means poor farms in Iceland, one finds a large amount of bones from neonates and then again from older animals, past their prime (McGov- ern, 2003). This is a typical zooarchaeo- logical representation of a dairy economy, in which a population of milk cows is maintained at a level determined by the amount of pasture and fodder available and neonates are slaughtered for herd population control and in order to save their mother’s milk for human consump- tion. This is not to suggest that there was no dairy economy at Skálholt, only that a dedicated beef economy was present for 88

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Archaeologia Islandica

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