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Featured researches published by Erin Kennedy Thornton.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Earliest Mexican Turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo) in the Maya Region: Implications for Pre-Hispanic Animal Trade and the Timing of Turkey Domestication

Erin Kennedy Thornton; Kitty F. Emery; David W. Steadman; Camilla Speller; Ray Matheny; Dongya Y. Yang

Late Preclassic (300 BC–AD 100) turkey remains identified at the archaeological site of El Mirador (Petén, Guatemala) represent the earliest evidence of the Mexican turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) in the ancient Maya world. Archaeological, zooarchaeological, and ancient DNA evidence combine to confirm the identification and context. The natural pre-Hispanic range of the Mexican turkey does not extend south of central Mexico, making the species non-local to the Maya area where another species, the ocellated turkey (Meleagris ocellata), is indigenous. Prior to this discovery, the earliest evidence of M. gallopavo in the Maya area dated to approximately one thousand years later. The El Mirador specimens therefore represent previously unrecorded Preclassic exchange of animals from northern Mesoamerica to the Maya cultural region. As the earliest evidence of M. gallopavo found outside its natural geographic range, the El Mirador turkeys also represent the earliest indirect evidence for Mesoamerican turkey rearing or domestication. The presence of male, female and sub-adult turkeys, and reduced flight morphology further suggests that the El Mirador turkeys were raised in captivity. This supports an argument for the origins of turkey husbandry or at least captive rearing in the Preclassic.


Journal of Ethnobiology | 2008

Zooarchaeological Habitat Analysis of Ancient Maya Landscape Changes

Kitty F. Emery; Erin Kennedy Thornton

Abstract Consensus has not yet been reached regarding the role of human-caused environmental change in the history of Classic Maya civilization. On one side of the debate, researchers argue that growing populations and agricultural expansion resulted in environmental over-exploitation that contributed to societal collapse. Researchers on the other side of the debate propose more gradual environmental change resulting from intentional and sustainable landscape management practices. In this study, we use zooarchaeological data from 23 archaeological sites in 11 inland drainage systems to evaluate the hypothesis of reduction of forest cover due to anthropogenic activities across the temporal and spatial span of the ancient Maya world. Habitat fidelity statistics derived from zooarchaeological data are presented as a proxy for the abundance of various habitat types across the landscape. The results of this analysis do not support a model of extensive land clearance and instead suggest considerable chronological and regional stability in the presence of animals from both mature and secondary forest habitats. Despite relative stability, some chronological variation in land cover was observed, but the variation does not fit expected patterns of increased forest disturbance during periods of greatest population expansion. These findings indicate a complex relationship between the ancient Maya and the forested landscape.


Royal Society Open Science | 2018

Diversity of Management Strategies in Mesoamerican Turkeys : Archaeological, Isotopic and Genetic Evidence

Aurelie Manin; Eduardo Corona-M; Michelle Marie Alexander; Abigail Craig; Erin Kennedy Thornton; Dongya Y. Yang; Michael P. Richards; Camilla Speller

The turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) represents one of the few domestic animals of the New World. While current research points to distinct domestication centres in the Southwest USA and Mesoamerica, several questions regarding the number of progenitor populations, and the timing and intensity of turkey husbandry remain unanswered. This study applied ancient mitochondrial DNA and stable isotope (δ13C, δ15N) analysis to 55 archaeological turkey remains from Mexico to investigate pre-contact turkey exploitation in Mesoamerica. Three different (sub)species of turkeys were identified in the archaeological record (M. g. mexicana, M. g. gallopavo and M. ocellata), indicating the exploitation of diverse local populations, as well as the trade of captively reared birds into the Maya area. No evidence of shared maternal haplotypes was observed between Mesoamerica and the Southwest USA, in contrast with archaeological evidence for trade of other domestic products. Isotopic analysis indicates a range of feeding behaviours in ancient Mesoamerican turkeys, including wild foraging, human provisioning and mixed feeding ecologies. This variability in turkey diet decreases through time, with archaeological, genetic and isotopic evidence all pointing to the intensification of domestic turkey management and husbandry, culminating in the Postclassic period.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2011

Reconstructing ancient Maya animal trade through strontium isotope (87Sr/86Sr) analysis

Erin Kennedy Thornton


Quaternary International | 2008

A regional perspective on biotic change during the Classic Maya occupation using zooarchaeological isotopic chemistry

Kitty F. Emery; Erin Kennedy Thornton


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2017

The Uncertain Origins of Mesoamerican Turkey Domestication

Erin Kennedy Thornton; Kitty F. Emery


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Ancient Maya turkey husbandry: Testing theories through stable isotope analysis

Erin Kennedy Thornton; Kitty F. Emery; Camilla Speller


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Testing osteometric and morphological methods for turkey species determination in Maya faunal assemblages

Kitty F. Emery; Erin Kennedy Thornton; Ashley E. Sharpe; Petra Cunningham-Smith; Lisa Duffy; Brandon McIntosh


Archive | 2012

Animal Resource Use and Exchange at an Inland Maya Port: Zooarchaeological Investigations at Trinidad de Nosotros

Erin Kennedy Thornton


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Introduction to the special issue - Turkey husbandry and domestication: Recent scientific advances

Erin Kennedy Thornton

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Kitty F. Emery

Florida Museum of Natural History

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Ashley E. Sharpe

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

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Petra Cunningham-Smith

Florida Museum of Natural History

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Ray Matheny

Brigham Young University

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