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Publication


Featured researches published by Mark Maltby.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Questioning new answers regarding Holocene chicken domestication in China

Joris Peters; Ophélie Lebrasseur; Julia Best; Holly Miller; Tyr Fothergill; Keith Dobney; Richard M. Thomas; Mark Maltby; Naomi Sykes; Olivier Hanotte; Terry O’Connor; Matthew J. Collins; Greger Larson

Xiang et al. (1) assert that chickens were domesticated on the North China plain 10,000 y ago. Although a great deal remains unknown about the temporal and geographic origins of poultry husbandry, this claim is extraordinary. We welcome the increasing application of modern bioarcheological techniques to questions pertaining to animal domestication in China, but we are skeptical about these conclusions for several reasons.


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 1997

Domestic fowl on Romano-British sites: inter-site comparisons of abundance

Mark Maltby

The paper compares the abundance of domestic fowl bones with those of sheep/goat and pig from published and unpublished reports on Romano-British animal bones assemblages. The samples are drawn from 68 urban, military, nucleated, villa and unromanized rural settlements. Variations in abundance of domestic fowl within and between these settlement types are noted. Some methodological problems encountered in this survey are discussed and suggestions are made about how more reliable results could be achieved.


The Archaeological Journal | 2005

Ritual in some Early Bronze Age gravegoods

Ann Woodward; John Hunter; Rob A. Ixer; Mark Maltby; Philip J. Potts; Peter C. Webb; John S. Watson; M. C. Jones

This systematic study of selected ‘Wessex’ Early Bronze Age burial assemblages was undertaken to reassess the original purpose of the artefacts deposited and their significance in the burial ritual. Use-wear analysis and fragmentation assessment has been undertaken on daggers, whetstones, bone objects and beads. Lithological and physical analysis was also undertaken on the stone objects. The results show a remarkable disparity in use and fragmentation between certain artefact types. Some objects and groups might be seen as symbolic depositions placed by mourners, or as parts of ceremonial costume, rather than as possessions of the deceased.


Levant | 2017

Estimating population size, density and dynamics of Pre-Pottery Neolithic villages in the central and southern Levant: an analysis of Beidha, southern Jordan

Shannon Birch-Chapman; Emma Jenkins; Fiona Coward; Mark Maltby

An understanding of population dynamics is essential for reconstructing the trajectories of central and southern Levantine Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) villages. The aim of this investigation was to derive more empirically and statistically robust absolute demographic data than currently exists. Several methodologies were explored, including those based on dwelling unit size and the number of dwellings; residential floor area per person; population density; and allometric growth formulae. The newly established storage provisions formulae based on the affordance of sleeping individuals within structures was found to be the most viable method. Estimates were adjusted to reflect potential structural contemporaneity calculated from building use-life and phase length estimates based on archaeological, ethnographic and experimental research, and Bayesian chronological modelling of radiocarbon dates. The application of methodologies to the PPNB site of Beidha in southern Jordan is presented. The analysis highlights inconsistencies with current theory relating to population density at Beidha. In particular, the results suggest that nuclear families probably did not form the predominant dwelling unit type during Subphases A2 and B2. In addition, population density was estimated at anywhere between 350 and 900 people per ha. This range far exceeds the ethnographically derived density values commonly utilized for reconstructing PPN village populations (c. 90 to 294 people per ha).


Environmental Archaeology | 2012

Big fish and great auks: Exploitation of birds and fish on the Isle of Portland, Dorset, during the Romano-British period

Mark Maltby; Sheila Hamilton-Dyer

Abstract The paper considers the assemblage of bird and fish bones from a Romano-British settlement on the Isle of Portland, on the southern coast of England. Compared with contemporary sites, the assemblage includes an unusually large number of fish bones from a wide range of marine species, including large cod, other Gadidae, several species of seabream, scad and bass. The bird assemblage includes bones of a butchered great auk. This provides the first evidence that this extinct species was nesting off the shores of central southern England and being exploited for food in this period. Other seabirds identified included razorbill, great northern diver and gannet. The species represented are discussed in relation to other Romano-British sites, particularly the Roman town of Dorchester, situated 15 km away. Many of the species have been discovered on only a few contemporary sites and the presence of the seabream in particular indicates that seawater temperatures may have been warmer than until very recently. Possible cultural changes in diet and food procurement in the Roman period are also considered.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2016

New perspectives on the ecology of early domestic fowl: An interdisciplinary approach

Jacqueline Pitt; Phillipa K. Gillingham; Mark Maltby; John R. Stewart


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2009

Potential osteoarchaeological evidence for riding and the military use of horses at Malbork Castle, Poland

Aleks Pluskowski; Kris Seetah; Mark Maltby


Archive | 2010

Integrating Social and Environmental Archaeologies: Reconsidering Deposition.

James Morris; Mark Maltby


Archive | 2009

Animal bones from an industrial quarter at Malbork: towards an ecology of a castle built in Prussia by the Teutonic Order

Mark Maltby; Aleks Pluskowski; Kris Seetah


Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal | 2007

Chop and Change: Specialist Cattle Carcass Processing in Roman Britain

Mark Maltby

Collaboration


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Julia Best

Bournemouth University

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Naomi Sykes

University of Nottingham

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Holly Miller

University of Nottingham

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A. Foster

University of Leicester

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