I was just going to write the same thing. I have the original grey report
here at the Cambridge Archaeological Unit and could provide more info if
needed. We've found another cat skeleton recently from St.John's Divinity
School with similar if not the same skinning marks, although (no slaughter
marks) from 18th c. context (rather than 13th c. like those from Bennet
court). Lena Strid is a good person to ask. My best, Vida
On Mar 21 2012, Marta Moreno García wrote:
>Dear Sarah,
>
>many years ago I published the following work with Rosemary Luff:
>
>Luff, R. M.; *Moreno-García, M.**(1995).*Killing cats in the medieval
>period. An unusual episode in the history of Cambridge, England.
>/Archaeofauna/ *4*: 93-114.
>
>
>You can download it from my academia.edu profile:
>http://csic.academia.edu/MartaMorenoGarcía/Papers
>
>
>Best,
>Marta
>
>
>El 21/03/2012 15:00, Sarah McClure escribió:
>> Hi everyone,
>> I am looking for articles that deal with domestic cats in
>> archaeological assemblages (any period, location) for my undergraduate
>> students. If you know of any, I'd greatly appreciate the references!
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Sarah
>>
>> Sarah B. McClure, Ph.D.
>> Assistant Professor
>> Department of Anthropology
>> The Pennsylvania State University
>> University Park, PA 16802
>>
>> Email: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
>> Phone: 814-863-2694
>> http://www.anthro.psu.edu/
>>
>>
>
>
>
--
Vida Rajkovaca
Zooarchaeologist
Cambridge Archaeological Unit
Dept. of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
34a Storey's way
CB3 0DT
Cambridge
+44 1223 327802
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