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Sexing Viking Age horses from burial and non-burial sites in Iceland using ancient DNA
Authors
JH Barrett
S Boessenkool
+7 more
AT Gondek
JH Hallsson
R Leifsson
HM Nistelberger
L Orlando
AH Pálsdóttir
B Star
Publication date
1 January 2019
Publisher
Journal of Archaeological Science
Doi
Cite
Abstract
© 2018 The Authors Horses are the most common grave goods found in Icelandic Viking Age graves. Horse skeletons have previously been sexed based on pelvis shape and the presence of canine teeth in male horses over 4–5 years of age. Morphological data has shown that all horses from Icelandic burials that were amenable to sexing were male. Yet the use of morphological methods to determine sex is problematic since they rely on finding a well-preserved pelvis and/or robust canine teeth. Furthermore, quantitative data underlying the features of the horse pelvis used for sexing is lacking and canine teeth have been reported to occur in mares. In this study we build upon and extend recently developed methodologies to make use of shotgun sequencing of ancient DNA (aDNA) for molecular sexing of Viking Age horse remains. With minimal sequencing effort we identified the sex of the largest collection (n = 22) of Viking Age Icelandic horses studied to date, sourced from both burial (n = 19) and non-burial (n = 3) sites. Our results revealed a male to female sex bias ratio of 18:1 in burial sites, versus 0:3 in non-burial sites. These findings support the significant over-representation of male horses in Viking Age graves in Iceland, yet show that –albeit rare– mares could also be selected for ritual burial in Viking Age Iceland. This cost-effective method provides statistical confidence to allow for sexing of highly fragmented archaeological specimens with low endogenous DNA content
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Copenhagen University Research Information System
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Last time updated on 18/12/2019
Opin visindi
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NORA - Norwegian Open Research Archives
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Apollo (Cambridge)
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Last time updated on 19/02/2019