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Walruses on the Dnieper: new evidence for the intercontinental trade of Greenlandic ivory in the Middle Ages.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Kneale, Catherine 

Abstract

Mediaeval walrus hunting in Iceland and Greenland-driven by Western European demand for ivory and walrus hide ropes-has been identified as an important pre-modern example of ecological globalization. By contrast, the main origin of walrus ivory destined for eastern European markets, and then onward trade to Asia, is assumed to have been Arctic Russia. Here, we investigate the geographical origin of nine twelfth-century CE walrus specimens discovered in Kyiv, Ukraine-combining archaeological typology (based on chaîne opératoire assessment), ancient DNA (aDNA) and stable isotope analysis. We show that five of seven specimens tested using aDNA can be genetically assigned to a western Greenland origin. Moreover, six of the Kyiv rostra had been sculpted in a way typical of Greenlandic imports to Western Europe, and seven are tentatively consistent with a Greenland origin based on stable isotope analysis. Our results suggest that demand for the products of Norse Greenland's walrus hunt stretched not only to Western Europe but included Ukraine and, by implication given linked trade routes, also Russia, Byzantium and Asia. These observations illuminate the surprising scale of mediaeval ecological globalization and help explain the pressure this process exerted on distant wildlife populations and those who harvested them.

Description

Funder: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

Keywords

Ancient DNA, Stable isotopes, Historical ecology, Middle Ages, Odobenus Rosmarus Rosmarus, Ecological Globalization, Animals, Walruses, Geography, Archaeology, Russia, DNA, Ancient

Journal Title

Proc Biol Sci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0962-8452
1471-2954

Volume Title

289

Publisher

The Royal Society
Sponsorship
European Research Council (4-OCEANS (grant agreement no. 951649))
Norges Forskningsråd (Catching the Past (262777))
Leverhulme Trust (Northern Journeys (MRF-2013-065))