ARCHAEOMALACOLOGY:
SHELLS IN THE
ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD
Katherine
Szabó
QEII Research Fellow,
Vesna DimitrijevicProf., Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade ;vesnadim@beotel.yu Catherine DupontUMR 6566 CNRS CReAAH « Centre de Recherche en Archéologie Archéosciences Histoire » CNRS, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes 2, Nantes et Ministère de la Culture, Bâtiment 24-25, Université de Rennes I – Campus Beaulieu 74205CS, 35042 RENNES Cx, France ;catherine.dupont@univ-rennes1.fr Sándor Gulyás (subject to his agreement)
Research fellow, University of Szeged , Department of Geology and Paleontology, H-6722 Szeged, Egyetem u.2-6. , Hungary ;gulyas-sandor@t-online.hu
Nathalie Serrand
INRAP, Rue des
Gommiers Blancs Parnasse, 97120 Saint-Claude, Guadeloupe ; nathalie.serrand@inrap.fr
Adrián Velázquez Castro
Museo del Templo Mayor, Instituto Nacional de
Antropología e Historia, México; adrianveca@yahoo.com
Luis Gómez Gastélum
Departamento de Estudios Mesoamericanos y
Mexicanos, Universidad de Guadalajara, México;
The study of
invertebrate remains has traditionally been overshadowed by analysis of animal
bones in the archaeological record. Yet evidence for human collection and
modification of shells in particular has great temporal depth and is to be
found in all corners of the world. This session seeks to highlight the
potential of molluscan remains to investigate issues of resource procurement
and use, the social context of shell gathering and utilisation, and the various
ways in which archaeomalacology can assist in current issues of environmental
change and management. Three sub-sessions will examine the use of shell as a
raw material, the status and nature of shellfish as a food resource, and the
potential of shell to probe questions of environmental and site transformations
through time.
► Acquisition and use of shell raw materials in prehistory
Vesna
Dimitrijevic, Catherine Dupont, Sándor Gulyás, Nathalie Serrand
Shells in general,
and in particular species well-known across the world, such as spiny oysters (Spondylus spp.), tusk shells (Dentalium spp.), conchs (Strombus spp.), cowries (Trivia spp./Cypraea spp.) or mud snails (Cyclope
neritea), were valued raw materials throughout prehistory as well as in
more recent historic times. Common ways of shell acquisition involved
harvesting coastal areas, including diving trips by those groups who lived by
the sea, or developing exchange networks for those inhabiting inland areas.
There is also the recorded collection of fossil shells. Shell products
sometimes might have signaled a specific local character of a particular group,
or were similarly valued across a wider region, thus illustrating bonds, rather
than differences between diverse social groups.
This sub-session
focuses on patterns of acquisition and use of shell raw materials as well as on
the production sequence of shell items in time and space. Discussions of these
patterns will also relate to the question of economy, both understood as
subsistence and industry. Specific themes of interest include the exploitation
of shells as raw materials in relation to their dietary functions, or choices
made to use particular shells along with or as opposed to other raw materials.
► Shell
middens and shells as a food resource
Adrián Velázquez Castro and Luis Gómez Gastélum
In this sub-session
we seek to integrate archaeological, historical, anthropological and biological
studies that give insight into relationships between human and mollusc
communities with a specific focus upon gathering of molluscs for subsistence.
While many studies over the years have seen molluscs as a marginal resource of
little overall importance, the testimony of shell middens as well as widespread
information from historical and anthropological sources clearly tell us that
shellfish-gathering was a regular and important activity. This importance is not limited to economics
or dietary structure, but also forms a part of social and ritual
practices. Shellfish gathering and
midden creation has a larger social context.
This sub-session
provides a venue to explore the relationships between human groups and
molluscan resources and especially encourages the combination of information
derived from multiple disciplines, as well as studies that seek to
contextualise shell-gathering in a wider socio-economic context.
► Shells
as indicators of palaeoenvironment, site formation and transformation
Katherine
Szabó
Shells, whether
deliberately introduced to a site by humans or whether introduced through other
natural processes, can give insight into aspects of the ancient environment as
well as the formation and transformation of archaeological deposits. In stratified sites, changes in the
composition and structure of shell assemblages through time can give shed light
on environmental change, whilst the comparison of various sites within an
archaeological landscape can help us understand mosaic landscapes and the
spread of different resources. The
comparison of archaeological and modern shell assemblages can also provide an
invaluable perspective to issues of resource management, modern environmental
change and degradation, and the impact of invasive species.
Molluscan remains can
also be of great assistance in untangling patterns of site formation and
transformation, through studies of taphonomic alteration, bioturbation, or
fine-grained investigations of naturally — and culturally — introduced shells
within deposits.
This sub-session aims
to investigate the potential of archaeological shell to answer questions not
directly related to subsistence or material culture and especially welcomes
contributions which mobilise the study of archaeological shell in relation to
modern resource management and environmental change.