A Quantitative Diagnosis of Notches Made by Hammerstone Percussion and Carnivore Gnawing on Bovid Long Bones
- 1 October 1994
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 59 (4) , 724-748
- https://doi.org/10.2307/282345
Abstract
The frequency and morphology of notches produced on bovid long bones by carnivore gnawing (tooth notches) and hammerstone-on-anvil breakage (percussion notches) are quantified. Notches are semicircular- to arcuate-shaped indentations on fracture edges with corresponding negative flake scars on medullary surfaces. We restrict our analysis to notches produced under controlled conditions by either carnivores or hammerstones when diaphyses are breached to extract marrow. Percussion notches are characteristically more frequent, and, in cortical view, broader and shallower than tooth notches. The flakes removed from percussion notches are typically broader, and have a more obtuse release angle, than those removed from tooth notches. These morphological differences are statistically significant for notches on Bovid Size 1 and 2 long bones but not on Bovid Size 3 long bones.Notches should be more durable than marks produced by carcass consumers on bone surfaces because they penetrate the entire thickness of the bone. As a result, notches are not easily obscured by weathering, chemical corrosion, or adhering matrix. Given this durability, and the initial success we have had in distinguishing the actor responsible for notch production on modern bones, notches can be used, with some limitations, to identify bone consumers archaeologically.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Percussion marks, tooth marks, and experimental determinations of the timing of hominid and carnivore access to long bones at FLK Zinjanthropus, Olduvai Gorge, TanzaniaJournal of Human Evolution, 1995
- Percussion marks on bone surfaces as a new diagnostic of hominid behaviourNature, 1988
- Carcass consumption sequences and the archaeological distinction of scavenging and huntingJournal of Human Evolution, 1986
- Cannibalism in the NeolithicScience, 1986
- The Evidence for Middle-Wisconsin Peopling of Beringia: An EvaluationQuaternary Research, 1984
- On the Possible Utilization ofCamelopsby Early Man in North AmericaQuaternary Research, 1984
- Toward the Definition of Criteria for the Recognition of Artificial Bone AlterationsQuaternary Research, 1984
- Paleoanthropological Implications of the Nonarcheological Bone Assemblage from Swartklip I, South-Western Cape Province, South AfricaQuaternary Research, 1975
- Quantitative Analysis of Upper Paleolithic Stone ToolsAmerican Anthropologist, 1966
- Experimental Archeology1American Anthropologist, 1961