1. Archives of human-dog relationships : Genetic and stable isotope analysis of Arctic fur clothing
- Author
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Anne Lisbeth Schmidt, Alison Harris, Martin Appelt, James Nottingham, Kerstin Lidén, Mikkel-Holger S. Sinding, Robert Knudsen, Bjarne Grønnow, Gunilla Eriksson, Anders J. Hansen, Alba Rey-Iglesia, Love Dalén, Tatiana R. Feuerborn, and Michelle Alexander
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,History ,Sampling protocol ,Wild species ,Zoology ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,01 natural sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Arkeologi ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Isotope analysis ,060102 archaeology ,National museum ,business.industry ,Nitrogen isotopes ,Carbon isotopes ,06 humanities and the arts ,Arctic clothing ,Clothing ,Mitochondrial DNA ,The arctic ,Geography ,Taxon ,Arctic ,Domestic dogs ,Archaeology ,business - Abstract
Among Indigenous populations of the Arctic, domestic dogs (Canislupus familiaris) were social actors aiding in traction and subsistence activities. Less commonly, dogs fulfilled a fur-bearing role in both the North American and Siberian Arctic. Examples of garments featuring dog skins were collected during the 19th-20th centuries and are now curated by the National Museum of Denmark. We sequenced the mitochondrial genomes of macroscopically identified dog skin garments. We conducted stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratio analysis of the dog furs and of fur samples from contemporaneous pelts of Arctic (C. lupus arctos) and grey (C. lupus) wolves. Despite the presence of biocides used to protect the fur clothing during storage, we extracted well-preserved DNA using a minimally-invasive sampling protocol. Unexpectedly, the mtDNA genomes of one-third of the samples were consistent with wild taxa, rather than domestic dogs. The strong marine component in the diets of North American dogs distinguished them from Greenland and Canadian wolves, but Siberian dogs consumed diets that were isotopically similar to wild species. We found that dog provisioning practices were variable across the Siberian and North American Arctic, but in all cases, involved considerable human labor. ArchSci2020
- Published
- 2020