Dear Katerina,
This may or may not be relevant since it’s moving from rodents to insectivores, but I imagine the practicalities aren’t all that different. There’s a brief description of
hedgehog cooking from contemporary Morocco in the following article (I think the Haddon has a copy, or you can borrow mine if you’re interested and it’s out).
Good luck getting the dissertation finished.
David
Moreno-García, M. 2003. ‘Hunting practices and consumption patterns in rural communities in the Rif mountains (Morocco) – some ethno-zoological notes’ in S. Jones O’Day, W. van Neer & A. Ervynck (eds) Behaviour Behind Bones: the zooarchaeology of ritual, religion, status and identity. pp. 327-334. Oxford: Oxbow
-----Original Message-----
From: Analysis of animal remains
from archaeological sites [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Katerina Papayiannis
Sent: 17 August 2005 14:55
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ZOOARCH] Rodent
consumption
Dear Everyone,
I am an MPhil from Cambridge and work on microfaunal skeletal material from a Bronze Age site in the Aegean Sea, Greece. My material comes from urban contexts, mainly kitchens, hearths and vessels, and enough of it is burnt. I am exploring the possibility of it being purposely burnt for cooking and I am looking for any ethnographic parallel, ancient or modern, on rodent consumption/cooking. Any ideas?
Katerina Papayiannis
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