The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines
Representatives of the Diodontidae family (porcupinefish) are known to have been fished by prehistoric Indo-Pacific populations; however, the antiquity of the use of this family is thus far unknown. We report here on the presence of Diodontidae in the archaeological sites of Bubog I, II, and Bilat i...
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2023
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ph-ateneo-arc.sa-faculty-pubs-11282023-07-12T02:28:45Z The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines Boulanger, Clara Pawlik, Alfred O'Connor, Sue Sémah, Anne-Marie Reyes, Marian C Ingicco, Thomas Representatives of the Diodontidae family (porcupinefish) are known to have been fished by prehistoric Indo-Pacific populations; however, the antiquity of the use of this family is thus far unknown. We report here on the presence of Diodontidae in the archaeological sites of Bubog I, II, and Bilat in Mindoro, Philippines, dating back to c. 13,000 BP (Before Present). This evidence demonstrates the early exploitation by islanders of poisonous fish. Every part of porcupinefish can be toxic, but the toxicity is mostly concentrated in some organs, while other parts are edible. The continuous presence of Diodontidae remains throughout the stratigraphic record of these Philippines shell middens suggests that porcupinefish were prepared by human inhabitants of the sites to render them safe for consumption, indicating an advanced cultural knowledge of the preparation needed to separate the toxic principle from the edible parts. This constitutes one of the rare examples of poison processing by humans, aside from the contentious wooden stick poison applicator from Border Cave (South Africa). 2023-06-26T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/129 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/sa-faculty-pubs/article/1128/viewcontent/animals_13_02113.pdf Sociology & Anthropology Department Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo hunter-gatherer marine environment Diodontidae poison Indo-Pacific Anthropology Archaeological Anthropology Arts and Humanities Social and Behavioral Sciences |
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hunter-gatherer marine environment Diodontidae poison Indo-Pacific Anthropology Archaeological Anthropology Arts and Humanities Social and Behavioral Sciences |
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hunter-gatherer marine environment Diodontidae poison Indo-Pacific Anthropology Archaeological Anthropology Arts and Humanities Social and Behavioral Sciences Boulanger, Clara Pawlik, Alfred O'Connor, Sue Sémah, Anne-Marie Reyes, Marian C Ingicco, Thomas The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
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Representatives of the Diodontidae family (porcupinefish) are known to have been fished by prehistoric Indo-Pacific populations; however, the antiquity of the use of this family is thus far unknown. We report here on the presence of Diodontidae in the archaeological sites of Bubog I, II, and Bilat in Mindoro, Philippines, dating back to c. 13,000 BP (Before Present). This evidence demonstrates the early exploitation by islanders of poisonous fish. Every part of porcupinefish can be toxic, but the toxicity is mostly concentrated in some organs, while other parts are edible. The continuous presence of Diodontidae remains throughout the stratigraphic record of these Philippines shell middens suggests that porcupinefish were prepared by human inhabitants of the sites to render them safe for consumption, indicating an advanced cultural knowledge of the preparation needed to separate the toxic principle from the edible parts. This constitutes one of the rare examples of poison processing by humans, aside from the contentious wooden stick poison applicator from Border Cave (South Africa). |
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text |
author |
Boulanger, Clara Pawlik, Alfred O'Connor, Sue Sémah, Anne-Marie Reyes, Marian C Ingicco, Thomas |
author_facet |
Boulanger, Clara Pawlik, Alfred O'Connor, Sue Sémah, Anne-Marie Reyes, Marian C Ingicco, Thomas |
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Boulanger, Clara |
title |
The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
title_short |
The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
title_full |
The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
title_fullStr |
The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Exploitation of Toxic Fish from the Terminal Pleistocene in Maritime Southeast Asia: A Case Study from the Mindoro Archaeological Sites, Philippines |
title_sort |
exploitation of toxic fish from the terminal pleistocene in maritime southeast asia: a case study from the mindoro archaeological sites, philippines |
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Archīum Ateneo |
publishDate |
2023 |
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https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/129 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/sa-faculty-pubs/article/1128/viewcontent/animals_13_02113.pdf |
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