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expected in a wild harem group. Thus, the patter neither matches a
wild batchelor group (in terms of age structure) or a family, harem
group, in terms of sex structure. This trend is perhaps therefore
influenced by human selection and management strategies.
The higher mortality of subadults represented in the post-cranial
fusion stage data could be explained by different deposition
patterns
for post-cranial vs cranial elements. Whilst the number of animals
killed in what would normally be considered prime meat production
age is significant it is still smaller than would be expected in a
conventional specialized meat economy. The
herd structure at Botai
does not match well with either expected models for hunting or
conventional specialist models for the exploitation of meat and milk.
There are many potential explanations for this ranging from
taphonomic and depositional bias to mixed herd use. However, we
also investigate the possibility that herd structure relates to the
specific economic and environmental constraints presented to
early
horse herds that may differ for later models for management that are
heavily driven by foddering needs.
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