Stone-age humans imported deer to remote Scottish islands

Wild animals were transported across land and sea to create a new resource

Image | red deer stag

Caption: Red deer in Scotland (Massimo Catarinella, cc-by-sa-3.0)

Audio | Quirks and Quarks : Stone-age Humans Imported Deer To Remote Scottish Islands - 2016/04/09 - Pt. 3

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About 5,500 years ago, Stone Age humans somehow moved wild Red deer from mainland Europe to colonize the remote Orkney islands and Outer Hebrides, north of Scotland. Dr. (external link)Jacqui Mulville(external link), a Reader in Bioarchaeology at Cardiff University in Wales, and her colleagues, were interested in finding how the deer got to these islands, which are too far from Scotland for natural migration to be likely.
They analyzed DNA from deer bone from archaeological sites and discovered that the early deer on the islands were not related to any local groups - and seem likely to have come from continental Europe. This suggests that prehistoric humans transported the deer across land and sea to colonize the islands.
Once released and established, the deer would have been harvested for food, skin and especially antler and bone, which were valuable materials for making tools.
Related Links
- Paper(external link) in Proceedings B:
- Cardiff University release(external link)
- BBC News story(external link)
- The Guardian story(external link)