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of pathways to animal domestication: ‘commensal’, ‘prey’ and
‘direct’. Commensal is where an unintended close living association
might eventual change into domesticity, with the dog being an oft
cited example of this. Prey route is where the relationship with a
common quarry changes over time (again potentially unintentionally)
to involve more and more control. This is the most common form of
domestication relating to food animals and one most frequently
undertaken by peoples who were already plant agriculturalists, but
still hunted animals. Directed pathway domestication implies a prior
knowledge of what it is to domesticate an animal and the deliberate
act of targeting a species to do that. Zeder cites horse as an example
of the rare direct pathway and thus suggests that, as a relatively late
example of a major domesticate, it was targeted by people with
knowledge of the process themselves or through interaction with
others, as suggested by Anthony and Brown (2011). However, in the
specific case of the Botai, the genetics implies continuity of local
hunter-gatherer populations with no evidence for outside contact that
left any genetic mark. As such this would imply a prey route
domestication by local hunter-gatherer populations. This is actually
quite rare and its only clear parallel is reindeer domestication.
Reindeer are also animals that were hunted by relict Palaeolithic-
derived populations, but can also be ridden and milked. Indeed the
close cosmological parallels between reindeer herders and hunters
have been noted. One can envisage a very similar process at Botai by
hunter-gatherers with similar ancestry, relating to animals that can
perform similar functions. Whilst reindeer are common to the taiga,
horses are common to the more southerly forest steppes. It now
seems, when considering the human and horse ancient genomic data
together, that there was a significant population replacement, dating
to the middle Bronze Age, that saw peoples like the Botai and their
local horse stock, eventually replaced by groups migrating from the
West with their own horse.
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