Domestic dogs and wild canids on the Northwest Coast of North America: Animal husbandry in a region without agriculture?

Date

2020

Authors

McKechnie, Iain
Moss, Madonna L.
Crockford, Susan J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

Abstract

Domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) occur in the archaeological record throughout North America but few zooarchaeological studies have examined the extent of wild and domestic canids using multi-site observations across regions. Here, we present a meta-analysis of 172,310 mammal specimens identified from 210 archaeological sites along the Northwest Coast focusing on canid abundance, distribution, and osteological identifications. We show that canids have a ubiquitous geographic distribution and a high relative abundance in particular Northwest Coast sub-regions and that species-level identifications are overwhelmingly of domestic dogs in contrast to ~1% of non-domestic canids (wolf, coyote, and fox). Along with geochemical and genetic data, these zooarchaeological observations indicate a variety of roles for dogs including hunting, companionship, and wool production in a region lacking terrestrial agriculture and domestic livestock. We suggest the frequently applied taxonomic status of ‘indeterminate canid’ underestimates the extent to which domestic dogs played key roles in regional economies and cultural practices. Increased attention to resolving taxonomic ambiguity of canids through improving comparative collections and osteometric datasets will help clarify the non-conventional domestication pathways practiced by Northwest Coast peoples.

Description

Keywords

North America, Fisher-hunter-gatherers, Animal domestication, Zooarchaeology, Northwest Coast, Dogs, Canids

Citation

McKechnie, I., Moss, M. L., & Crockford, S. J. (2020). Domestic dogs and wild canids on the Northwest Coast of North America: Animal husbandry in a region without agriculture? Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 60, 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101209.