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Thanks Rita, I was able to download that.

A search on Google Scholar for ‘otolith taphonomy’ turned up nothing that
looked useful, but for ‘aragonite taphonomy’ it seems palaeontologists have
been looking at this problem with regard to Silurian molluscs, so I will
download their papers and see what conclusions they have, or have not, come
to

Mat



*From:* Analysis of animal remains from archaeological sites <
[log in to unmask]> *On Behalf Of *Rita Dias
*Sent:* Tuesday, 8 January 2019 12:39 AM
*To:* [log in to unmask]
*Subject:* Re: [ZOOARCH] Otoliths



Dear all,



Having worked on fish bones from Cabeço da Amoreira, a Portuguese
Shellmidden, for my PhD, what I can tell you is that only the Meagre
(*Argyrosomus
regius*) otoliths, although there were other species present. In fact,
mullets were the most abundant. That may be consequence of their size
robustness and very likely is. My colleagues and I have written a paper on
seasonality that deals with taphonomy to a degree:   Dias, R.,
Estrella-Martínez, J., Butler, P., Nederbragt, A., Hall, I. R., Barrulas,
P., ... & Bicho, N. (2018). Mesolithic human occupation and seasonality:
sclerochronology, δ 18 O isotope geochemistry, and diagenesis verification
by Raman and LA-ICP-MS analysis of Argyrosomus regius (meagre) sagittae
otoliths from layer 1 of Cabeço da Amoreira Mesolithic shell midden (Muge,
Portugal). *Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences*, 1-24.

 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0569-3.



If you don't have access, please email me and I will gladly send a copy
your way. I would send you my thesis but it is written in portuguese, so I
don't think it would be very useful.



All the best,

Rita



Daniella Bar-Yosef <[log in to unmask]> escreveu no dia segunda,
7/01/2019 à(s) 11:03:

You are right, Fiona, I do get the occasional otholith among shells.

Daniella Bar-Yosef
------------------------------

*From:* Analysis of animal remains from archaeological sites <
[log in to unmask]> on behalf of fiona beglane <
[log in to unmask]>
*Sent:* Monday, January 7, 2019 12:22:17 PM
*To:* [log in to unmask]
*Subject:* Re: [ZOOARCH] Otoliths



I wonder as well whether otoliths always get bagged with the bones. They
don't 'look' like bones and in among all the shells of a midden I wonder if
they often get discarded with the shells. Most shell midden excavations
seem to sample the shells rather than having a specialist work through all
of them - there could literally be tonnes and particularly in e.g.
development-led archaeology this is more likely. Obviously all this depends
on who is excavating and what their experience is in terms of
zooarchaeology/malacology and whether there is an on-site specialist or
whether the assemblage is packed up and sent to the specialist/s after the
dig.

Just a thought.

Fiona





Fiona Beglane PhD MIAI

Animal Bone Specialist
Licensed Archaeologist
Donegal, Ireland
074 97 21937
087 686 3914 (M)
Alternate email address: [log in to unmask]
Institute of Technology, Sligo
http://itsligo.academia.edu/fionabeglane








On Sunday, January 6, 2019, 3:42:03 AM GMT, Matthew Campbell <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:





Dear colleagues

Ngā Mihi o te Tau Hou / Happy New Year

Do any of you know anything about the taphonomy of otoliths? I have
observed that they survive very well in some sites and not at all in
others, but I can’t see any reason for this.

If anyone can shine any light on this topic or point me to any references I
would be grateful (searches on Google Scholar and ResearchGate didn’t help)

Mat



****************************

Matthew Campbell
CFG Heritage Ltd
132 Symonds St
Auckland 1010



phone: (+64) 09 309 2426
mobile: (+64) 021 437 555
email: [log in to unmask]
web: www.cfgheritage.com




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-- 

Rita Dias, PhD.

ICArEHB - Interdisciplinary Center for Archaeology and Evolution of Human
Behaviour
Faculdade das Ciências Humanas e Sociais
Universidade do Algarve
Campus Gambelas
8005-139, Faro
Portugal
(+351) 289 800 988




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