Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T13:49:45.279Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

NEW EVIDENCE OF THE EARLIEST DOMESTIC DOGS IN THE AMERICAS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 December 2018

Angela Perri*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom
Chris Widga
Affiliation:
Don Sundquist Center of Excellence in Paleontology, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, TN 37615, USA
Dennis Lawler
Affiliation:
Illinois State Museum Research and Collections Center, 1011 East Ash St., Springfield, IL 62703, USA; Pacific Marine Mammal Center, 20612 Laguna Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach, CA 92651, USA; Center for American Archaeology, Kampsville, IL 62053, USA
Terrance Martin
Affiliation:
Illinois State Museum Research and Collections Center, 1011 East Ash St., Springfield, IL 62703-3500, USA
Thomas Loebel
Affiliation:
Illinois State Archaeological Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL 61820, USA
Kenneth Farnsworth
Affiliation:
Illinois State Archaeological Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL 61820, USA
Luci Kohn
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Illinois 62026, USA
Brent Buenger
Affiliation:
Western Archaeological Services, 1600 Dewar Dr., Rock Springs, WY 82901, USA
*
(angela.r.perri@durham.ac.uk, corresponding author)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The domestication of dogs likely occurred in Eurasia by 16,000 years ago, and the initial peopling of the Americas potentially happened around the same time. Dogs were long thought to have accompanied the first migrations into the Americas, but conclusive evidence for Paleoindian dogs is lacking. In this study, the direct dating of two dogs from the Koster site (Greene County, Illinois) and a newly described dog from the Stilwell II site (Pike County, Illinois) to between 10,190 and 9,630 cal BP represents the earliest confirmed evidence of domestic dogs in the Americas and individual dog burials anywhere in the world. Analysis of these animals shows Early Archaic dogs were medium sized, lived active lifestyles, and exhibited significant morphological variation. Stable isotope analyses suggest diets dominated by terrestrial C3 resources and substantial consumption of riverine fish.

La domesticación del perro probablemente ocurrió en Eurasia hace 16,000 años, potencialmente alrededor del mismo tiempo que el poblamiento inicial de América. Durante mucho tiempo se pensó que los perros habían acompañado las primeras migraciones humanas hacia el continente americano, pero no se ha encontrado evidencia concluyente de perros paleoindios. La datación directa de dos perros del sitio Koster (condado Greene, Illinois) y un perro recientemente descrito del sitio Stilwell II (condado Pike, Illinois) entre 10.190 y 9630 cal aP representa la evidencia confirmada más temprana de perros domésticos en América y de enterramientos individuales de perros en cualquier parte del mundo. El análisis de estos animales muestra que los perros arcaicos tempranos eran de tamaño mediano y vivían estilos de vida activos, pero que ya exhibían una variación morfológica significativa. Los análisis de isótopos estables sugieren que sus dietas estuvieron dominadas por recursos terrestres de tipo C3 y por el consumo sustancial de peces de agua dulce.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 by the Society for American Archaeology 

The domestication and subsequent cultural roles of dogs have been highly debated in the archaeological and genomic literature, especially over the last decade (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle and Colombeau2015; Frantz et al. Reference Frantz, Mullin, Pionnier-Capitan, Lebrasseur, Ollivier, Perri, Linderholm, Mattiangeli, Teasdale, Dimopoulos, Tresset, Duffraisse, McCormick, Bartosiewicz, Gál, Nyerges, Sablin, Bréhard, Mashkour, Bălăşescu, Gillet, Hughes, Chassaing, Hitte, Vigne, Dobney, Hänni, Bradley and Larson2016; Freedman et al. Reference Freedman, Gronau, Schweizer, Vecchyo, Han, Silva, Galaverni, Fan, Marx, Lorente-Galdos, Beale, Ramirez, Hormozdiari, Alkan, Vilà, Squire, Geffen, Kusak, Boyko, Parker, Lee, Tadigotla, Siepel, Bustamante, Harkins, Nelson, Ostrander, Marques-Bonet, Wayne and Novembre2014; Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Sablin, Stevens, Hedges, Hofreiter, Stiller and Després2009; Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Sablin, Després, Hofreiter, Lázničková-Galetová, Stevens and Stiller2013; Larson et al. Reference Larson, Karlsson, Perri, Webster, Ho, Peters, Stahl, Piper, Lingaas, Fredholm, Comstock, Modiano, Schelling, Agoulnik, Leegwater, Dobney, Vigne, Vilà, Andersson and Lindblad-Toh2012; Morey and Jeger Reference Morey and Jeger2015, Reference Morey and Jeger2017; Perri Reference Perri2016a; Perri et al. Reference Perri, Smith and Bosch2015; Shipman Reference Shipman2015; Thalmann et al. Reference Thalmann, Shapiro, Cui, Schuenemann, Sawyer, Greenfield, Germonpré, Sablin, López-Giráldez, Domingo-Roura, Napierala, Uerpmann, Loponte, Acosta, Giemsch, Schmitz, Worthington, Buikstra, Druzhkova, Graphodatsky, Ovodov, Wahlberg, Freedman, Schweizer, Koepfli, Leonard, Meyer, Krause, Pääbo, Green and Wayne2013; vonHoldt et al. Reference vonHoldt, Pollinger, Lohmueller, Han, Parker, Quignon, Degenhardt, Boyko, Earl, Auton, Reynolds, Bryc, Brisbin, Knowles, Mosher, Spady, Elkahloun, Geffen, Pilot, Jedrzejewski, Greco, Randi, Bannasch, Wilton, Shearman, Musiani, Cargill, Jones, Qian, Huang, Ding, Zhang, Bustamante, Ostrander, Novembre and Wayne2010). Advances in zooarchaeological, morphometric, and genomic methods have led to a burst of research in the field but have also engendered disagreement regarding the interpretation of data from investigations into their origins. These debates extend to the earliest appearance of domesticated dogs in the Americas and the circumstances leading to their presence in the region, which are unresolved.

Though it is now widely accepted that all dogs were domesticated from an ancient wolf ancestor (Freedman et al. Reference Freedman, Gronau, Schweizer, Vecchyo, Han, Silva, Galaverni, Fan, Marx, Lorente-Galdos, Beale, Ramirez, Hormozdiari, Alkan, Vilà, Squire, Geffen, Kusak, Boyko, Parker, Lee, Tadigotla, Siepel, Bustamante, Harkins, Nelson, Ostrander, Marques-Bonet, Wayne and Novembre2014; Vilà et al. Reference Vilà, Savolainen, Maldonado, Amorim, Rice, Honeycutt, Crandall, Lundeberg and Wayne1997), findings diverge on the timing, location, and number of domestication sites. The tentative identification of a number of proposed Paleolithic dogs dating from before the Last Glacial Maximum (Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Sablin, Stevens, Hedges, Hofreiter, Stiller and Després2009; Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Lázničková-Galetová and Sablin2012; Germonpré, Sablin et al. Reference Germonpré, Sablin, Lázničková-Galetová, Després, Stevens, Stiller and Hofreiter2015, Germonpré, Lázničková-Galetová et al. Reference Germonpré, Lázničková-Galetová, Losey, Räikkönen and Sablin2015; Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Fedorov, Danilov, Galeta, Jimenez, Sablin and Losey2017; Ovodov et al. Reference Ovodov, Crockford, Kuzmin, Higham, Hodgins and van der Plicht2011; Sablin and Khlopachev Reference Sablin and Khlopachev2002), some up to 40,000 years ago (Camarós et al. Reference Camarós, Münzel, Cueto, Rivals and Conard2016), has led to debate regarding the origins of the human–dog relationship (Boudadi-Maligne and Escarguel Reference Boudadi-Maligne and Escarguel2014; Crockford and Kuzmin Reference Crockford and Kuzmin2012; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle and Colombeau2015; Morey and Jeger Reference Morey and Jeger2015; Perri Reference Perri2016a).

Despite the suggestion of domesticated dogs much earlier in the Paleolithic, a date of around 16,000 cal BP is generally accepted as the timing of domestication based on secure archaeological and genomic evidence (Axelsson et al. Reference Axelsson, Ratnakumar, Arendt, Maqbool, Webster, Perloski, Liberg, Arnemo, Hedhammar and Lindblad-Toh2013; Frantz et al. Reference Frantz, Mullin, Pionnier-Capitan, Lebrasseur, Ollivier, Perri, Linderholm, Mattiangeli, Teasdale, Dimopoulos, Tresset, Duffraisse, McCormick, Bartosiewicz, Gál, Nyerges, Sablin, Bréhard, Mashkour, Bălăşescu, Gillet, Hughes, Chassaing, Hitte, Vigne, Dobney, Hänni, Bradley and Larson2016; Freedman et al. Reference Freedman, Gronau, Schweizer, Vecchyo, Han, Silva, Galaverni, Fan, Marx, Lorente-Galdos, Beale, Ramirez, Hormozdiari, Alkan, Vilà, Squire, Geffen, Kusak, Boyko, Parker, Lee, Tadigotla, Siepel, Bustamante, Harkins, Nelson, Ostrander, Marques-Bonet, Wayne and Novembre2014; Morey and Jeger Reference Morey and Jeger2015; Perri Reference Perri2016a). Individual domestication locations have been proposed in the Middle East (vonHoldt et al. Reference vonHoldt, Pollinger, Lohmueller, Han, Parker, Quignon, Degenhardt, Boyko, Earl, Auton, Reynolds, Bryc, Brisbin, Knowles, Mosher, Spady, Elkahloun, Geffen, Pilot, Jedrzejewski, Greco, Randi, Bannasch, Wilton, Shearman, Musiani, Cargill, Jones, Qian, Huang, Ding, Zhang, Bustamante, Ostrander, Novembre and Wayne2010), Europe (Thalmann et al. Reference Thalmann, Shapiro, Cui, Schuenemann, Sawyer, Greenfield, Germonpré, Sablin, López-Giráldez, Domingo-Roura, Napierala, Uerpmann, Loponte, Acosta, Giemsch, Schmitz, Worthington, Buikstra, Druzhkova, Graphodatsky, Ovodov, Wahlberg, Freedman, Schweizer, Koepfli, Leonard, Meyer, Krause, Pääbo, Green and Wayne2013), Central Asia (Shannon et al. Reference Shannon, Boyko, Castelhano, Corey, Hayward, McLean, White, Said, Anita, Bondjengo, Calero, Galov, Hedimbi, Imam, Khalap, Lally, Masta, Oliveira, Pérez, Randall, Tam, Trujillo-Cornejo, Valeriano, Sutter, Todhunter, Bustamante and Boyko2015), and East Asia (Wang et al. Reference Wang, Zhai, Yang, Wang, Zhong, Liu, Fan, Yin, Zhu, Poyarkov, Irwin, Hytönen, Lohi, Wu, Savolainen and Zhang2016), while Frantz and colleagues (Reference Frantz, Mullin, Pionnier-Capitan, Lebrasseur, Ollivier, Perri, Linderholm, Mattiangeli, Teasdale, Dimopoulos, Tresset, Duffraisse, McCormick, Bartosiewicz, Gál, Nyerges, Sablin, Bréhard, Mashkour, Bălăşescu, Gillet, Hughes, Chassaing, Hitte, Vigne, Dobney, Hänni, Bradley and Larson2016) suggested a dual origin in East Asia and Europe. The possibility of an independent domestication of dogs in the Americas has been raised by some (Koop et al. Reference Koop, Burbidge, Byun, Rink and Crockford2000; Witt et al. Reference Witt, Judd, Kitchen, Grier, Kohler, Ortman, Kemp and Malhi2015) but rejected by others (Leonard et al. Reference Leonard, Wayne, Wheeler, Valadez, Guillén and Vilà2002; vonHoldt et al. Reference vonHoldt, Pollinger, Lohmueller, Han, Parker, Quignon, Degenhardt, Boyko, Earl, Auton, Reynolds, Bryc, Brisbin, Knowles, Mosher, Spady, Elkahloun, Geffen, Pilot, Jedrzejewski, Greco, Randi, Bannasch, Wilton, Shearman, Musiani, Cargill, Jones, Qian, Huang, Ding, Zhang, Bustamante, Ostrander, Novembre and Wayne2010).

The presence of early dogs in the pre-contact Americas is often assumed to be the result of companion animals arriving from across the Bering Land Bridge with migrating Pleistocene human populations (Fiedel Reference Fiedel2005; Schwartz Reference Schwartz1998; van Asch et al. Reference van Asch, Zhang, Oskarsson, Klütsch, Amorim and Savolainen2013). Migrating groups may have used dogs to transport goods and people, work as hunting aids, serve as bed-warmers, warn people of potential danger, ward off predators, and act as sources of food and fur. A recent analysis of dog remains from eastern Siberia suggests that dogs may have been important for hunting and particularly sled transport in the region up to 15,000 years ago (Pitulko and Kasparov Reference Pitulko and Kasparov2017), similar to their present functions in some Arctic regions today (Brown et al. Reference Brown, Darwent and Sacks2013).

The earliest human migration into North America south of the ice sheet is proposed via a coastal route between about 25,000 and 15,000 cal BP (Braje et al. Reference Braje, Dillehay, Erlandson, Klein and Rick2017; Llamas et al. Reference Llamas, Fehren-Schmitz, Valverde, Soubrier, Mallick, Rohland, Nordenfelt, Valdiosera, Richards, Rohrlach, Barreto Romero, Espinoza, Cagigao, Jiménez, Makowski, Leboreiro Reyna, Lory, Ballivián Torrez, Rivera, Burger, Ceruti, Reinhard, Wells, Politis, Santoro, Standen, Smith, Reich, Ho, Cooper and Haak2016; Skoglund and Reich Reference Skoglund and Reich2016) or via a land route through the Ice-Free Corridor by about 15,000 (Munyikwa et al. Reference Munyikwa, Rittenour and Feathers2017; Potter et al. Reference Potter, Reuther, Holliday, Holmes, Miller and Schmuck2017). Results of ancient DNA testing suggest ancestral Native American populations split from Siberian populations by 20,000 years ago before moving into eastern Beringia and the Americas (Moreno-Mayar et al. Reference Moreno-Mayar, Potter, Vinner, Steinrücken, Rasmussen, Terhorst, Kamm, Albrechtsen, Malaspinas, Sikora, Reuther, Irish, Malhi, Orlando, Song, Nielsen, Meltzer and Willerslev2018). The earliest archaeological evidence of human presence in the Americas occurs in both North and South America around 14,500 cal BP (Dillehay et al. Reference Dillehay, Ocampo, Saavedra, Sawakuchi, Vega, Pino, Collins, Cummings, Arregui, Villagran, Hartmann, Mella, González and Dix2015; Halligan et al. Reference Halligan, Waters, Perrotti, Owens, Feinberg, Bourne, Fenerty, Winsborough, Carlson, Fisher, Stafford and Dunbar2016).

There are a number of large canid remains dating to the late Upper Pleistocene from across Beringia and southern Siberia, many of which are suggested to be Paleolithic dogs (see Germonpré et al. Reference Germonpré, Fedorov, Danilov, Galeta, Jimenez, Sablin and Losey2017 for a review of the Western Beringian and Siberian specimens). These include canids from Ulakhan Sular (ca. 17,200 BP), Diuktai Cave (ca. 17,300-14,100 BP), Afontova Gora-1 (ca. 16,900 BP), Verkholenskaia Gora (ca. 14,900 BP), Berelekh (ca. 14,100 BP), Little John (ca. 14,000 BP; Easton et al. Reference Easton, Mackay, Young, Schnurr, Yesner, Goebel and Buvit2011), McDonald Creek (ca. 14,000–12,600 BP; Mueller et al. Reference Mueller, Goebel, Esdale and Graf2015), Nikita Lake (ca. 13,800 BP), Ushki-I (ca. 12,800 BP), and Ust'Kiakhta (ca. 12,300 BP). At present, the taxonomy and interpretation of many of these specimens is contested or inconclusive. Others have yet to be further evaluated.

Although the arrival of domesticated dogs with an initial human migration has been the most reasonable explanation for their presence in the Americas, evidence for Paleoindian dogs has proven elusive. Previously, Jaguar Cave (Idaho) was thought to hold the earliest domestic dog remains in the Americas at over 10,000 years old (Lawrence Reference Lawrence1967). However, when dated directly, the remains proved to be only 3,000–4,000 years old (Gowlett et al. Reference Gowlett, Hedges, Law and Perry1987). Similarly, Beebe (Reference Beebe1980) reported early dog remains dating to around 20,000 years ago from Old Crow Basin (Yukon Territory), but later dating demonstrated that this dog is of late Holocene age (Harington Reference Harington2003). While there are suggestions of domesticated dogs over 10,000 years old from a few North American sites (Grayson et al. Reference Grayson, Parmalee, Lyman and Mead1988; Haag Reference Haag and Aikens1970; Jenkins et al. Reference Jenkins, Davis, Stafford, Campos, Connolly, Cummings, Hofreiter, Hockett, McDonough, Luthe, O'Grady, Swisher, White, Yates, Yohe, Yost, Willerslev, Graf, Ketron and Waters2013; Lyman Reference Lyman2013; Saunders and Daeschler Reference Saunders and Daeschler1994; Stanford Reference Stanford1978; Walker and Frison Reference Walker and Frison1982), these canid remains have not benefited from recent chronological or morphological evaluations.

Fiedel (Reference Fiedel2005) suggested that the lack of dog remains during the Paleoindian period is not an indication that dogs were absent but is rather the result of their ephemeral nature. While this is a distinct possibility, the earliest appearance of domestic dogs at Early Archaic sites in the midcontinent (Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Morey and Relethford2005) raises questions regarding their origins and routes into the Americas. At Hinds Cave (Texas), Tito and colleagues (Reference Tito, Belknap, Sobolik, Ingraham, Cleeland and Lewis2011) reported finding a small bone fragment within a human coprolite, which they determined as the earliest evidence for dogs in the Americas. Genomic analysis was performed, and the specimen was dated to around 9,200 cal BP. Other early examples of domesticated dogs include specimens from Modoc Rock Shelter in Illinois (ca. 8,400 cal BP; Ahler Reference Ahler1993), Dust Cave in Alabama (ca. 8,400 cal BP; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Morey and Relethford2005), Rodgers Shelter in Missouri (ca. 8,800 cal BP; McMillan Reference McMillan1970), and Koster in Illinois (ca. 9,500 cal BP; Brown and Vierra Reference Brown and Vierra1983; redated in this study). Together, these specimens constitute the corpus of the earliest confirmed archaeological dog record in the Americas.

The arrival of dogs in the Americas has important cultural and ecological implications. Dogs were the first invasive species (along with humans) and domesticates in the Americas, potentially affecting populations of small mammals through predation, other species of Canis through hybridization, and other carnivores through competition or disease transmission (Doherty et al. Reference Doherty, Dickman, Glen, Newsome, Nimmo, Ritchie, Vanak and Wirsing2017). They may have also contributed to important adaptations in hunting and mobility during the peopling of the Americas and into the Pleistocene-Holocene transition.

Here, we present the identification, zooarchaeological analysis, stable isotope analysis, and direct radiocarbon dating of a new isolated dog burial from Stilwell II, an Early Archaic site in the lower Illinois River valley. We also present new direct radiocarbon dates and stable isotope results for dogs from the nearby Koster site and three additional Archaic dogs from the region. These dates confirm that the Stilwell II and Koster dogs represent the earliest directly dated evidence for domesticated dogs in the Americas and the oldest intentional individually buried dogs known worldwide. Similar dog burials only appear in hunter-gatherer contexts approximately 1,000 years later (Perri Reference Perri2014; Perri Reference Perri2016b). Importantly, we contribute to an emerging analytical framework for understanding the behavior and life history of these canids. Our analyses (zooarchaeology, paleopathology, morphology, and stable isotopes) lend insight into what these dogs looked like, how they lived, and their roles within Early Archaic communities.

Site Backgrounds

The Koster Site

The Koster site (11GE4) is in a minor tributary valley of the lower Illinois River in Greene County, Illinois (Figure 1). The site is multicomponent and highly stratified with cultural deposits spanning the Early Archaic to Mississippian, providing a nearly continuous record of Holocene human occupation (Brown and Vierra Reference Brown and Vierra1983). The site was excavated continuously over a ten-year period and is one of the most studied sites in the lower Illinois River valley (e.g., Butzer Reference Butzer1978; Hajic Reference Hajic1990; Komar and Buikstra Reference Komar and Buikstra2003).

Figure 1. Location of the Koster and Stilwell II sites.

Three isolated dog burials (cf. Perri Reference Perri, Rowley-Conwy, Serjeantson and Halstead2017) in shallow, well-demarcated pits were identified from Horizon 11, one of the Early Archaic phases at Koster (Figure 2). There was also a fourth burial, likely associated with a later period (Hill Reference Hill1972; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992), and a fifth burial is reported (Neusius Reference Neusius and Fagan1996), the remains of which are not currently present in the Illinois State Museum collection. The skeletons of the three dogs from Horizon 11 were complete and articulated, and they lacked evidence of butchering or skinning (Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992). Given their presence in Horizon 11 and association with a nearby charcoal date (Brown and Vierra Reference Brown and Vierra1983), the dogs were attributed to the terminal Early Archaic. Though this date is commonly reported as 8,500 years ago (e.g., Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992:225), the calibrated age based on the associated charcoal 14C dates is about 9,500 cal BP. These specimens are often cited as the earliest domesticated dogs and occurrences of intentional dog burials in the Americas (Fiedel Reference Fiedel2005; Lapham Reference Lapham2010; Morey Reference Morey2010; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Morey and Relethford2005).

Figure 2. Excavation of the Koster F2256 dog burial (photograph by Del Baston, courtesy of the Center for American Archeology).

The Stilwell II Site

The Stilwell II site (11PK1044) was discovered in 1960 when road-grading operations cut through an alluvial fan in Pike County, Illinois, about 35 km from the Koster site. Gregory Perino collected lithic artifacts and faunal remains from what he described as two living areas indicated by a dark layer of soil 15.2 cm thick and 6.1 m long that was exposed at the base of a 4.3 m cutbank (Perino Reference Perino1970:119). He subsequently recovered a dog burial in the northern area of the site and a human burial in the southern area. The dog burial (Figure 3), which was complete and articulated (Perino Reference Perino1970, Reference Perino1977), was curated at the Illinois State Museum. The faunal remains collected by Perino and others from later excavations done by the Illinois State Archaeological Survey include white-tailed deer, turkey, turtle, small birds, vole, squirrel, fish, and mussel. After the two rescue excavations in 1960 and 1962, Perino published very little about the site and left no field notes or maps. The Illinois State Archaeological Survey began reexcavating the site in 2015, and that is ongoing (see Supplemental text).

Figure 3. The Stilwell II dog burial in situ (courtesy of the Illinois State Museum).

Materials and Methods

Zooarchaeology, Morphology, and Paleopathology

The Koster and Stilwell II dogs were analyzed in the zooarchaeology laboratory at the Illinois State Museum's Research and Collections Center, where they are curated. All skeletal specimens were examined to note the condition of epiphyseal closure, presence of cut marks, damage by carnivore or rodent gnawing, and exposure to fire. Analysis of shoulder height relies on the regression equations of Harcourt (Reference Harcourt1974), and body-mass estimates use the methods presented by Losey and colleagues (Reference Losey, Osipov, Sivakumaran, Nomokonova, Kovychev and Diatchina2014, Reference Losey, McLachlin, Nomokonova, Latham and Harrington2016). Researchers have previously published comprehensive measurement data, burial information, and paleopathology for the Koster dogs (Lawler et al. Reference Lawler, Widga, Rubin, Reetz, Evans, Tangredi, Thomas, Martin, Hildebolt, Smith, Leib, Sackman, Avery and Smith2016; Morey Reference Morey1992, Reference Morey2006; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992), which is not repeated here. Recent analysis of ancient DNA from one Koster specimen confirms a link to Eurasian domesticated dogs, likely originating in Siberia (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018; Thalmann et al. Reference Thalmann, Shapiro, Cui, Schuenemann, Sawyer, Greenfield, Germonpré, Sablin, López-Giráldez, Domingo-Roura, Napierala, Uerpmann, Loponte, Acosta, Giemsch, Schmitz, Worthington, Buikstra, Druzhkova, Graphodatsky, Ovodov, Wahlberg, Freedman, Schweizer, Koepfli, Leonard, Meyer, Krause, Pääbo, Green and Wayne2013). Recovery of ancient DNA from the Stilwell II dog has failed thus far.

Though little documentation exists for the site, Perino (Reference Perino1970:119) is clear that the remains of the Stilwell II dog were found in a shallow, intentional burial in what he described as the floor of a living area. The only in situ photograph of the dog shows an articulated skeleton as an isolated burial (Figure 3) with a northwest-southeast orientation (head facing west). The front legs appear to be tucked partly under the body.

Following Von den Driesch (Reference Von den Driesch1976), we provide all possible skeletal measurements for the Stilwell II dog and have retaken all possible measurements from the two Koster dogs (F2256 and F2357) dated in this study (Supplemental Table 1). These measurements were compared to a sample of seven Archaic dogs from Iowa and Illinois (Supplemental Table 3). Modern wild canids (C. latrans, C. lupus) curated in the Illinois State Museum, the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute, and the East Tennessee Museum of Natural History were also included in osteometric analyses to illustrate the morphological differences between domesticated and wild taxa. Three-dimensional models of the Koster F2256 and Stilwell II mandibles are available for download (see Data Availability Statement).

Observations of the appendicular skeleton include overt and incipient pathology. We define incipient pathological changes as very mild or very early changes not easily visualized by standard radiographic methods and not clarified substantially by standard computed tomography. Each bone was examined directly, supported by magnification as necessary. Microcomputed tomography has been conducted with some of the specimens as parts of other studies (Lawler et al., Reference Lawler, Widga, Rubin, Reetz, Evans, Tangredi, Thomas, Martin, Hildebolt, Smith, Leib, Sackman, Avery and Smith2016). All specimens were photographed. Observations were recorded by location within bone, resulting in multiple scores for given joint components (Supplemental Table 2).

Radiocarbon Dating and Stable Isotopes

Small rib fragments (1–2 cm in length) from the Koster and Stilwell II dogs were submitted to the University of Arizona AMS lab (Tucson, Arizona) or Rafter Radiocarbon lab (Lower Hutt, New Zealand) for radiocarbon dating (Table 2). In both cases, collagen was extracted using a modified Longin technique of acid demineralization followed by removal of organic contaminants using a weak basic solution (Longin Reference Longin1971). Samples were combusted and further purified in a dedicated gas line and converted to graphite targets. These targets were analyzed using the accelerator at the Department of Physics, University of Arizona (USA) and the National Isotope Centre, GNS Science (New Zealand), respectively. All 14C results are calibrated as 2-sigma age ranges with the Intcal13 dataset (Reimers et al. Reference Reimer, Bard, Bayliss, Beck, Blackwell, Ramsey, Buck, Cheng, Edwards, Friedrich, Grootes, Guilderson, Haflidason, Hajdas, Hatté, Heaton, Hoffmann, Hogg, Hughen, Kaiser, Kromer, Manning, Niu, Reimer, Richards, Scott, Southon, Staff, Turney and van der Plicht2013) using Calib 7.1 html (Stuiver et al. Reference Stuiver, Reimer and Reimer2017).

Bone-collagen stable isotope samples followed the same laboratory preparation methods as those prepared for 14C but were analyzed on a continuous-flow gas-ratio mass spectrometer coupled to an elemental analyzer. At the University of Arizona lab, standardization is based on acetanilide for elemental concentration, NBS-22 and USGS-24 for δ13C, and IAEA-N-1 and IAEA-N-2 for δ15N. Precision is better than ± 0.1 for δ13C and ± 0.2 for δ15N. At the Rafter lab, standardization is based on leucine (-22.7‰ for δ13C, 2.2‰ for δ15N), and caffeine (-37.9‰ for δ13C, -7.4‰ for δ15N). Precision for these measurements is ± 0.3‰ for δ15N and ± 0.2‰ for δ13C. All δ13C results are reported relative to VPDB, and all δ15N results are reported relative to N-Air. A third Koster dog (222D) from Horizon 11 was also included in the isotopic analyses.

These data are compared to additional Early and Middle Archaic dog samples from Modoc Rockshelter in Illinois and Rodgers Shelter in Missouri, as well as published archaeological dog and human stable isotope data from the lower Illinois River valley and American Bottom (Carbaugh et al. Reference Carbaugh, Headley and Fort2018; Fort et al. Reference Fort, Hedman, Ambrose, McElrath and Evans2016; Hargrave et al. Reference Hargrave, Hedman and Wolf2006; Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002). A dataset consisting of midwestern wolves (Fox-Dobbs et al. Reference Fox-Dobbs, Bump, Peterson, Fox and Koch2007), midwestern deer (Cormie and Schwarcz Reference Cormie and Schwarcz1994), and freshwater fish from lower Illinois River valley archaeological assemblages dating to before the local use of maize (Brugam et al. Reference Brugam, Little, Kohn, Brunkow, Vogel and Martin2017) is also included to illustrate general dietary trends in archaeological dog samples. The modern deer dataset is divided into two groups representing animals with very little C4 contribution to the diet (C3 deer) and those with >10% C4 contribution to the diet (C4 deer).

Results

Zooarchaeology, Morphology, and Paleopathology

On the Stilwell II specimens, faint root etching was noted on several of the long bones, whereas only two occurrences of rodent gnawing were observed. No cut marks from dispatch wounds (e.g., on the atlas vertebra) or dismemberment (e.g., cuts near articular ends) were present on the skeleton. The dog was an adult of undetermined age, and the absence of a baculum from the otherwise well-represented posterior bones suggests the animal was a female.

Since it is a relatively complete skeleton, the Stilwell II dog has the potential to provide anatomical insights into the size and morphology of early North American dogs. It had an estimated shoulder height between 504 and 517 mm, based on radial (RDgl) and tibial (TAgl) length (Table 1; Harcourt Reference Harcourt1974). Losey and colleagues recently suggested improved methods for body-mass estimation based on measurements of craniodental (Reference Losey, Osipov, Sivakumaran, Nomokonova, Kovychev and Diatchina2014) and limb elements (Reference Losey, McLachlin, Nomokonova, Latham and Harrington2016). Application of these regression equations to the Stilwell II dog resulted in widely varying estimates (17–32 kg). Following Losey and colleagues (Reference Losey, McLachlin, Nomokonova, Latham and Harrington2016), we prefer body-mass estimates that are based on elements relating directly to locomotion, such as limb elements. Estimates of body mass based on the humerus (distal breadth; HMbd) and radius (proximal breadth; RDbp) are both 17.1 kg (Table 1), similar in mass and build to a small, modern English setter. Dogs from the nearby Koster site are slightly shorter (with shoulder heights between 439 and 463 mm) and more lightly built (12–14 kg; Figure 4).

Figure 4. Relative size of the Stilwell II and Koster dogs.

Table 1. Shoulder Height and Body Mass Estimates of the Koster and Stilwell II Dogs.

a Data from Harcourt (Reference Harcourt1974) in mm.

VDDm18 and VDDm19 from mandibular measurements in Von den Driesch (Reference Von den Driesch1976). VDDm18 is the vertical height of the ramus and VDDm19 is the vertical height of the mandibular body behind the M1.

Mandibular morphology varies significantly between the Stilwell II and Koster dogs (Figure 5). The Stilwell II dog mandible is robust with relatively small carnassial molars and a deep mandibular body. Dog mandibles from the Koster site, however, are more gracile, with large carnassial molars and shallow bodies, relative to their size.

Figure 5. Comparison of left mandibles from (top to bottom) the Stilwell II, Koster F2357, and Koster F2256 dogs.

Observations of the Stilwell II dog's axial skeleton included multifocal periodontal-periosteal disease and severe tooth wear. The first and second molars exhibit extreme wear (Figure 6), and the right lower canine is worn nearly blunt. Damage of this type depends partly on genetic susceptibility (e.g., modern small-breed dogs), and on diet and habits such as chewing on bones. The dog could have experienced several complications of chronic oral cavity disease. The rough enlargement of perialveolar mandibular bone below the mandibular arcades signals gingival and periodontal disease. DeBowes and colleagues (Reference DeBowes, Mosier, Logan, Harvey, Lowry and Richardson1996) showed that multiple organ pathology can be related to oral cavity diseases such as gingivitis and periodontitis. Significant associations were found between periodontitis and diseases of the kidney glomerular and interstitial tissue; myocardium, especially papillary muscle; and hepatic parenchyma. The likely explanation is recurring bacteremia originating in the oral tissue (DeBowes et al. Reference DeBowes, Mosier, Logan, Harvey, Lowry and Richardson1996). Without regular dental care, modern domestic dogs commonly develop a similar oral pathology, and from the perspective of modern veterinary medicine, the Stilwell II dog would have been very uncomfortable.

Figure 6. The left mandible of the Stilwell II dog showing advanced tooth wear.

Deviations of spinous processes were observed on seven vertebrae. Prevailing opinion has been that domestic dog vertebral spinous process deviations were caused by carrying packs or pulling travois (Darwent and Gilliland Reference Darwent and Gilliland2001; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Morey and Relethford2005; Warren Reference Warren and Crockford2000). However, it has been shown recently that thorough differential diagnosis of these features yields multiple possible pathological causes or pseudopathologies (Lawler et al. Reference Lawler, Widga, Rubin, Reetz, Evans, Tangredi, Thomas, Martin, Hildebolt, Smith, Leib, Sackman, Avery and Smith2016). Furthermore, the anatomical locations of affected vertebrae are protected by the caudodorsal neck ligament, tendon, and muscle mass (Miller et al. Reference Miller, Evans and Christensen1979) or lie below the protective transverse plane of the wings of the ilia. Thus, these vertebrae are not susceptible to injury related to carrying packs or pulling travois (Lawler et al. Reference Lawler, Widga, Rubin, Reetz, Evans, Tangredi, Thomas, Martin, Hildebolt, Smith, Leib, Sackman, Avery and Smith2016; Supplemental Table 2). A recent study of arctic foxes supports the notion that vertebral asymmetry can be a part of normal morphological variation in at least Canidae (Mustonen et al. Reference Mustonen, Lawler, Ahola, Koistinen, Jalkanen, Mononen, Lamidi and Nieminen2017).

The limbs yielded observations of normal, incipient, and overt pathological changes. The metapodials and phalanges yielded observations of incipient pathology (Supplemental Table 2). The summed changes are consistent with an active lifestyle and do not differ qualitatively from those seen in modern adult dogs (Lawler and Evans Reference Lawler and Evans2016; Lawler et al. Reference Lawler, Widga and Smith2017; Mustonen et al. Reference Mustonen, Lawler, Ahola, Koistinen, Jalkanen, Mononen, Lamidi and Nieminen2017).

Radiocarbon Dating and Stable Isotopes

The Stilwell II and Koster specimens previously had not been directly radiocarbon dated. Because they were discovered within Horizon 11, three dogs from Koster were associated with five Horizon 11 radiocarbon (14C) assays yielding dates between 8,480 ± 110 BP (ISGS-236) and 8,130 ± 90 BP (ISGS-1065; Brown and Vierra Reference Brown and Vierra1983:187), but often cited as 8,500 years ago (e.g., Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992). A fourth undated Koster dog likely comes from a later Archaic occupation. Here, we present three new direct 14C dates from the Stilwell II dog and two Koster Horizon 11 dogs (F2256 and F2357; Table 2). Lyophilized samples from all three dogs had white, fluffy appearances, and carbon to nitrogen ratios (C:N) were within the range of modern mammalian collagen (Tuross et al., Reference Tuross, Fogel and Hare1988), suggesting well-preserved collagen.

Table 2. Bone Collagen Radiocarbon Dates and Stable Isotope Values.

Koster dog F2256 dates to 8,790 ± 30 BP (10,110–9,680 cal BP), Koster dog F2357 dates to 8,820 ± 30 BP (10,130–9,700 cal BP), and the Stilwell II dog dates to 8,840 ± 80 BP (10,190–9,630 cal BP). The chronological differences between the Stilwell II and Koster individuals are not statistically significant at the scale of 14C dating. These new dates range several hundred years earlier than previously associated dates for the Koster dogs and add another lower Illinois River valley dog to the record of early precontact dogs.

The stable isotope values for the Stilwell II dog and three Koster Horizon 11 dogs are presented in Table 2. These data are tightly clustered in isotope space, with an average δ13Ccoll value of -22.7‰ (σ=0.3) and an average δ15Ncoll value of 8.7‰ (σ=0.3).

Discussion

Morphological Variation in Early North American Dogs

Most morphological work on North American dogs has focused on cranial shape (Morey Reference Morey1992, Reference Morey2010; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992; Olsen Reference Olsen1985; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Morey and Relethford2005); however, measurements on mandibles (Bozell Reference Bozell1988; Walker and Frison Reference Walker and Frison1982) and limb elements (Morey and Aaris-Sørensen Reference Morey and Aaris-Sørensen2002) have also been examined. Relative to wild canids, North American dogs generally exhibit shortened muzzles with accompanying changes to dental and mandibular elements. Smaller body size and the size of certain elements (i.e., carnassial molars) have been attributed to domestication (Morey Reference Morey2010), though recent work has reevaluated the usefulness of many so-called domestication markers (Ameen et al. Reference Ameen, Hulme-Beaman, Evin, Germonpré, Britton, Cucchi, Larson and Dobney2017; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle, Kosintsev, Bachura, Sablin, Gusev, Fleming and Losey2017; Janssens et al. Reference Janssens, Spanoghe, Miller and Van Dongen2016). Unfortunately, in the zooarchaeological record, crania are fragile and often poorly preserved. Although relatively complete crania are present at the Koster site, the Stilwell II dog is represented only by cranial fragments despite field documentation indicating that a complete skull was found.

To better understand morphological variability among early midwestern dogs, we use a limited set of mandibular measurements from a larger sample of Archaic midwestern domesticated dogs and modern wild Canis spp. (Supplemental Table 3). In this dataset, Archaic midwestern dogs generally have deeper mandibular bodies (i.e., greater height of the mandible behind the carnassial M1; Von den Driesch Reference Von den Driesch1976:60) relative to the length of the carnassial molar (Von den Driesch Reference Von den Driesch1976:60; Figure 7). The Stilwell II, Simonsen and one of the Modoc specimens have dog-sized carnassial molars but relatively deep, wolf-like mandibles. Three Koster and two Modoc dogs also have deep mandibles relative to carnassial size, although they are much smaller specimens. Coyote-dog hybrids (coy-dogs) generally plot near the archaeological dogs in this morphospace, suggesting that hybrid individuals may be difficult to distinguish through morphology alone. It is also possible that some early archaeological dog samples are from hybrid individuals, as suggested by recent analysis of ancient DNA from one Koster dog (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018).

Figure 7. Relationship between carnassial length (Von den Driesch Reference Von den Driesch1976, measurement 13L) and mandibular body height (Von den Driesch Reference Von den Driesch1976, measurement 19) among different Canis groups. CS = Cherokee Sewer, Iowa; MD = Modoc Rock Shelter, Illinois; KS = Koster, Illinois (KS1 and 2 included in this study); SM = Simonsen, Iowa; SW = Stilwell II, Illinois. The dotted line connects the left and right mandibles of the same individual. See Supplemental Table 3.

Even this limited sampling of Archaic dogs allows some comparative insight into early dog morphology among contemporaneous specimens as well as those from several different periods represented at the same site. For example, the three dogs from Modoc Rock Shelter show a significant variation in mandibular height and length of carnassial molars (Figure 7). The largest dog dates to 8,560–8,200 cal BP (Supplemental Table 3) but exhibits intra-individual variation between the left and right mandible (shown via dotted line, Figure 7). Another dog from the site dates to 5,710–5,330 cal BP and has much smaller molars and a more gracile mandible. A third undated (likely Archaic) dog falls between these two. Similarly, from the Koster site, the two contemporaneous dogs and a third undated but likely contemporaneous dog all cluster. A fourth dog, likely from a later period (Hill Reference Hill1972; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992), is smaller than those three in both measurements (Figure 7).

Though only a small sample, the distinct differences between the mandibles of the robust Stilwell II dog and the more gracile Koster dogs (Figure 5), from individuals geographically and temporally indistinguishable, suggest variation in the earliest American dogs. This is perhaps unsurprising, given the morphological variation seen at sites from similar periods in eastern Siberia (Pitulko and Kasparov Reference Pitulko and Kasparov2017) and recent analysis of ancient DNA that shows at least two distinct ancient American dog haplogroups splitting between 16,400 and 12,900 years ago (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018). The probable female sex of the larger Stilwell II dog suggests the morphological differences are not the result of sexual dimorphism, especially given that the similarly gracile Koster dogs include a female (F2256) and a male (F2357; Morey and Wiant Reference Morey and Wiant1992). Similar morphological variation is seen in the two contemporaneous Middle Archaic dogs from Iowa (Figure 7): one is more robust, like the Stilwell II dog, and the other is more gracile, like the Koster dogs. Though this variation may be the result of morphologically distinct American dog lineages, it may also arise from local admixture with wild canids, such as coyotes and wolves, leading to rapid variation within a more homogenous initial dog population.

Hybridization of Early North American Dogs

Genomic work on wild canid populations has demonstrated that all North American Canis spp. could interbreed, often to a significant degree (Monzón et al. Reference Monzón, Kays and Dykhuizen2014; Wayne and Jenks Reference Wayne and Jenks1991). Although we analyze these taxa as distinct groups, it is likely that some of these specimens show admixture of different species, even in groups made up of modern museum specimens of “known” taxonomic affinity. For example, a recent analysis of ancient DNA from one of the Koster dogs we dated (F2256) revealed that although the specimen clusters with all other precontact North American dog material analyzed (spanning about 9,000 years), it also showed evidence for potential admixture with a midwestern coyote (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018). This may account for the morphological variation seen between the Koster dogs and the Stilwell II dog, which were concurrent in space and time.

For these reasons, we consider the present study as merely illustrative of general morphological trends in archaeological Canis. Combined genomic and morphological approaches have the potential to answer many questions about North American dog populations. However, these techniques are just being applied rigorously to questions of early dogs in the Americas.

Environment and Diet

The landscape in the lower Illinois River valley roughly 10,000 cal BP was a mesic, fire-sensitive woodland (Baker et al. Reference Baker, Maher, Chumbley and Van Zant1992, Nelson et al., Reference Nelson, Hu, Grimm, Curry and Slate2006). Although C4 plants were present in small numbers at that time (<22% C4), they began to dominate upland floras after about 9,000 cal BP with the spread of the tallgrass prairie (Nelson et al. Reference Nelson, Hu, Grimm, Curry and Slate2006). Within this environment, early Holocene human dietary protein was predominantly acquired from terrestrial and riverine sources (Styles and McMillan Reference Styles, McMillan, Emerson, McElrath and Fortier2009) and δ13C values would have ranged from −22‰ to −38‰ (average = −26.5‰; Tieszen Reference Tieszen1991; Tieszen and Fagre Reference Tieszen, Fagre, Lambert and Grupe1993).

The δ15N of bone collagen (δ15Ncoll) in the Midwest is influenced strongly by trophic-level fractionation, with a difference of about 3‰ between predators and their prey (Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002; Schoeninger and DeNiro Reference Schoeninger and DeNiro1984). Although landscape aridity can also affect the δ15N of primary consumers (Heaton et al. Reference Heaton, Vogel, von La Chevallerie and Collett1986), the mesic environment of the lower Illinois River valley approximately 10,000 years ago suggests that aridity would have contributed little to local δ15Ncoll values. However, seasonality may influence δ15Ncoll values through the recycling of body tissues due to periodic nutritional stress (Polischuk et al. Reference Polischuk, Hobson and Ramsay2001).

Most isotopic studies of human diets in the valley have focused on the dietary transition from hunting and gathering to growing maize (Buikstra et al. Reference Buikstra, Rose, Milner and Green1994; Emerson et al., Reference Emerson, Hedman and Simon2005; Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002) and have attempted to track the dietary effect of maize, a C4 grass, on populations that previously depended on a diet dominated by C3 sources. However, the δ15N of human diets has recently received more attention (Froehle et al. Reference Froehle, Kellner and Schoeninger2012; Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002). Schober (Reference Schober1998, cited in Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002) noted that δ15Ncoll of midwestern communities with a maize-dominated diet (δ15Ncoll = +9.5‰) were not significantly different from coeval groups that did not rely heavily on domesticates (δ15Ncoll = +8.9‰).

The Koster and Stilwell II dog isotope values reflect unsurprising results for early Holocene pre-maize diets in the region. Low δ13C values suggest terrestrial C3 resources, while high δ15N values may signal consumption of freshwater resources (Brugam et al. Reference Brugam, Little, Kohn, Brunkow, Vogel and Martin2017), human feces (Katzenberg Reference Katzenberg1989), and/or higher overall δ15N values in local prey. Early Archaic dog δ15N values are significantly greater than the single Early Archaic human value in the region (Kaskaskia Mine, Randolph County, Illinois; Hargrave et al., Reference Hargrave, Hedman and Wolf2006), but are more consistent with Middle and Late Archaic human and dog paleodiets (Figure 8). Since these values generally fall outside the range of modern wolves with a C3 terrestrial diet and are within the range of pre-maize freshwater fish from the Illinois River, it is likely that freshwater fish were a significant part of the Early Archaic dog's diet.

Figure 8. Early Archaic dog δ13Ccoll and δ15Ncoll values, compared to the ranges of modern wolves (Fox-Dobbs et al. Reference Fox-Dobbs, Bump, Peterson, Fox and Koch2007), modern deer (Cormie and Schwarcz Reference Cormie and Schwarcz1994), and archaeological fish from the Midwest (Brugam et al. Reference Brugam, Little, Kohn, Brunkow, Vogel and Martin2017). Stable isotope values from Early Archaic (Kaskaskia Mine, N = 1; Hargrave et al. Reference Hargrave, Hedman and Wolf2006), Middle Archaic (Broglio site, n = 16; Carbaugh et al. Reference Carbaugh, Headley and Fort2018), and Late Archaic (Tree Row site, n = 8; Fort et al. 2015) humans, two Late Archaic dogs from the Tree Row site (Fort et al. 2015), and post-maize human diets (N = 64; Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002) are also included for comparison. All illustrated samples are from the Illinois River valley or the American Bottom. See Supplemental Table 4.

On a larger scale, the variability in both human and dog δ15N values throughout the Holocene is relatively elevated compared to terrestrial herbivores and carnivores, suggesting riverine resources were common in diets throughout the region. The primary axis of change throughout the Holocene in both humans and dogs is in δ13C values. We interpret this as a general landscape transition to C4 tallgrass prairie after the Early Archaic (also see Nelson et al. Reference Nelson, Hu, Grimm, Curry and Slate2006), followed by increasing amounts of maize in human and dog diets during the Woodland and Mississippian periods (Hedman et al. Reference Hedman, Hargrave and Ambrose2002). Future establishment of a local early Holocene isotopic baseline for the Illinois valley is needed before we can further understand the role of dogs within the local food web.

Conclusions

The approximately 10,000-year-old Stilwell II and Koster dogs introduces a gap greater than 4,500 years between these earliest dog remains and the proposed initial migration into the Americas. This is consistent with genomic analyses proposing North American dog populations originated around 10,000 cal BP (Witt et al. Reference Witt, Judd, Kitchen, Grier, Kohler, Ortman, Kemp and Malhi2015), though others suggest an earlier split from Eurasian dogs (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018; Thalmann et al. Reference Thalmann, Shapiro, Cui, Schuenemann, Sawyer, Greenfield, Germonpré, Sablin, López-Giráldez, Domingo-Roura, Napierala, Uerpmann, Loponte, Acosta, Giemsch, Schmitz, Worthington, Buikstra, Druzhkova, Graphodatsky, Ovodov, Wahlberg, Freedman, Schweizer, Koepfli, Leonard, Meyer, Krause, Pääbo, Green and Wayne2013). Recent DNA analysis suggests precontact American dogs, including those from Koster, shared a common ancestor with eastern Siberian dogs around 15,600 years ago and saw an internal population split roughly 1,000 years later (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018), though it is not clear on which side of Beringia that split occurred. It is possible that the arrival of the first human populations into the Americas predated their access to Eurasian domesticated dogs, and thus they arrived without them. In this scenario, dogs may have arrived with later genetically indistinguishable migrating Siberian groups (as part of ongoing “migratory dribbles”; Meltzer Reference Meltzer2009:200) before the flooding of the Bering Land Bridge 11,000 years ago (Jakobsson et al. Reference Jakobsson, Pearce, Cronin, Backman, Anderson, Barrientos, Björk, Coxall, de Boer, Mayer, Mörth, Nilsson, Rattray, Stranne, Semiletov and O'Regan2017) but were not part of the very first pulse of migration into the Americas.

The earliest New World domesticated dogs appearing in the midcontinent around 10,000 years ago presents a conundrum both temporally and spatially, but the current absence of Paleoindian dogs in the American West may be the result of several factors. Evidence of earlier dogs in western North America may be unrecognized, despite the number of Clovis, Western Stemmed Tradition, and earlier sites (Erlandson et al. Reference Erlandson, Rick, Braje, Casperson, Culleton, Fulfrost, Garcia, Guthrie, Jew, Kennett, Moss, Reeder, Skinner, Watts and Willis2011; Smallwood and Jennings Reference Smallwood and Jennings2014; Stanford and Stenger Reference Stanford and Stenger2014). Some regions still have few early sites, and the ephemeral nature of some sites (e.g., procurement or satellite camps) may constrain the discovery of dog remains (Erlandson et al. Reference Erlandson, Rick, Braje, Casperson, Culleton, Fulfrost, Garcia, Guthrie, Jew, Kennett, Moss, Reeder, Skinner, Watts and Willis2011; Fiedel Reference Fiedel2005). If early dog remains are being encountered, they may not be identified as dogs, particularly given the often limited and poorly preserved nature of early skeletal material and the difficulty in distinguishing early dogs from wolves (Perri Reference Perri2016a) and coyotes. The few specimens that have been tentatively proposed as Paleoindian dogs (e.g., Grayson et al. Reference Grayson, Parmalee, Lyman and Mead1988; Haag Reference Haag and Aikens1970; Walker and Frison Reference Walker and Frison1982) have not been reevaluated, leaving their taxonomy unclear. These potential dogs are only slightly older than the Stilwell II and Koster specimens, leaving any dogs associated with the earliest human migration in the Americas undiscovered. Finally, it is possible that domesticated dogs entering the Americas with human groups facilitated rapid movement into the midcontinent, leaving little trace in western North America.

While an in situ domestication of North American wolves has been raised as a possibility (Koop et al. Reference Koop, Burbidge, Byun, Rink and Crockford2000; Witt et al. Reference Witt, Judd, Kitchen, Grier, Kohler, Ortman, Kemp and Malhi2015), this has been rejected by several genetic analyses (Freedman et al. Reference Freedman, Gronau, Schweizer, Vecchyo, Han, Silva, Galaverni, Fan, Marx, Lorente-Galdos, Beale, Ramirez, Hormozdiari, Alkan, Vilà, Squire, Geffen, Kusak, Boyko, Parker, Lee, Tadigotla, Siepel, Bustamante, Harkins, Nelson, Ostrander, Marques-Bonet, Wayne and Novembre2014; Leonard et al. Reference Leonard, Wayne, Wheeler, Valadez, Guillén and Vilà2002; Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018; Vilà et al. Reference Vilà, Savolainen, Maldonado, Amorim, Rice, Honeycutt, Crandall, Lundeberg and Wayne1997; VonHoldt et al. Reference vonHoldt, Pollinger, Lohmueller, Han, Parker, Quignon, Degenhardt, Boyko, Earl, Auton, Reynolds, Bryc, Brisbin, Knowles, Mosher, Spady, Elkahloun, Geffen, Pilot, Jedrzejewski, Greco, Randi, Bannasch, Wilton, Shearman, Musiani, Cargill, Jones, Qian, Huang, Ding, Zhang, Bustamante, Ostrander, Novembre and Wayne2010). Some North American archaeological dog specimens show genetic similarities with North American wolves (Koop et al. Reference Koop, Burbidge, Byun, Rink and Crockford2000; Witt et al. Reference Witt, Judd, Kitchen, Grier, Kohler, Ortman, Kemp and Malhi2015); however, this is likely the result of admixture rather than North American wolf domestication. Additional work on ancient American canids, particularly the inclusion of more ancient North American wolf and coyote reference specimens, will further clarify this issue.

Identification of earlier Paleoindian dogs, if they exist, will require distinguishing them from wild canid taxa. This has proven a difficult task, as seen from debates regarding proposed early dogs in the Paleolithic record of Eurasia (Boudadi-Maligne and Escarguel Reference Boudadi-Maligne and Escarguel2014; Crockford and Kuzmin Reference Crockford and Kuzmin2012; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle and Colombeau2015; Germonpré, Sablin et al. Reference Germonpré, Sablin, Lázničková-Galetová, Després, Stevens, Stiller and Hofreiter2015; Ovodov et al. Reference Ovodov, Crockford, Kuzmin, Higham, Hodgins and van der Plicht2011; Perri Reference Perri2016a). Differentiation between wild and domestic canids has been based primarily on morphological traits, often requiring well-preserved craniodental material. The validity of these traits for distinguishing domestication is also questionable, given the morphological plasticity of Canis (Ameen et al. Reference Ameen, Hulme-Beaman, Evin, Germonpré, Britton, Cucchi, Larson and Dobney2017; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle, Kosintsev, Bachura, Sablin, Gusev, Fleming and Losey2017; Janssens et al. Reference Janssens, Spanoghe, Miller and Van Dongen2016; Morey and Jeger Reference Morey and Jeger2015). Substantial introgression between newly arriving Eurasian dogs and North American wolves and coyotes likely contributed significantly to American dog ancestry as well, as suggested at Koster (Ní Leathlobhair et al. Reference Ní Leathlobhair, Perri, Irving-Pease, Witt, Linderholm, Haile, Lebrasseur, Ameen, Blick, Boyko, Brace, Cortes, Crockford, Devault, Dimopoulos, Eldridge, Enk, Gori, Gopalakrishnan, Grimes, Guiry, Hansen, Hulme-Beaman, Johnson, Kitchen, Kasparov, Kwon, Nikolskiy, Lope, Manin, Martin, Meyer, Myers, Omura, Rouillard, Pavlova, Sciulli, Sinding, Strakova, Ivanova, Widga, Willerslev, Pitulko, Barnes, Gilbert, Dobney, Malhi, Murchison, Larson and Frantz2018). This potentially extensive introgression, particularly in the case of early coy-dogs, may contribute to the misidentification of these specimens in the archaeological record. Though some past research has emphasized apparent introgression between ancient dogs and coyotes or wolves (Valadez et al. Reference Valadez, Rodríguez, Manzanilla, Tejeda, Snyder and Moore2006; Walker and Frison Reference Walker and Frison1982), the issue of early hybridization warrants more attention in future studies.

Analysis of ancient DNA is increasingly being used to identify domesticated dogs (Druzhkova et al. Reference Druzhkova, Thalmann, Trifonov, Leonard, Vorobieva, Ovodov, Graphodatsky and Wayne2013; Frantz et al. Reference Frantz, Mullin, Pionnier-Capitan, Lebrasseur, Ollivier, Perri, Linderholm, Mattiangeli, Teasdale, Dimopoulos, Tresset, Duffraisse, McCormick, Bartosiewicz, Gál, Nyerges, Sablin, Bréhard, Mashkour, Bălăşescu, Gillet, Hughes, Chassaing, Hitte, Vigne, Dobney, Hänni, Bradley and Larson2016; Larson et al. Reference Larson, Karlsson, Perri, Webster, Ho, Peters, Stahl, Piper, Lingaas, Fredholm, Comstock, Modiano, Schelling, Agoulnik, Leegwater, Dobney, Vigne, Vilà, Andersson and Lindblad-Toh2012), but such analyses require adequately preserved skeletal material, and results are subject to interpretation (Ding et al. Reference Ding, Oskarsson, Ardalan, Angleby, Dahlgren, Tepeli, Kirkness, Savolainen and Zhang2012; Savolainen et al. Reference Savolainen, Zhang, Luo, Lundeberg and Leitner2002; Skoglund et al. Reference Skoglund, Ersmark, Palkopoulou and Dalén2015; Thalmann et al. Reference Thalmann, Shapiro, Cui, Schuenemann, Sawyer, Greenfield, Germonpré, Sablin, López-Giráldez, Domingo-Roura, Napierala, Uerpmann, Loponte, Acosta, Giemsch, Schmitz, Worthington, Buikstra, Druzhkova, Graphodatsky, Ovodov, Wahlberg, Freedman, Schweizer, Koepfli, Leonard, Meyer, Krause, Pääbo, Green and Wayne2013). Increasingly, techniques that do not rely on ancient DNA preservation or the preservation of pristine specimens such as complete crania are allowing researchers to document individual life histories of canids, improving chances of identifying individuals in close contact with humans. These techniques include investigating paleopathology and trauma to clarify, for example, pack loading and mistreatment (Lawler et al. Reference Lawler, Widga, Rubin, Reetz, Evans, Tangredi, Thomas, Martin, Hildebolt, Smith, Leib, Sackman, Avery and Smith2016; Losey et al. Reference Losey, Osipov, Sivakumaran, Nomokonova, Kovychev and Diatchina2014), and geometric morphometrics (GM) to detect biomechanical differences among canids (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle and Colombeau2015; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Coquerelle, Kosintsev, Bachura, Sablin, Gusev, Fleming and Losey2017; Evin et al. Reference Evin, Souter, Hulme-Beaman, Ameen, Allen, Viacava, Larson, Cucchi and Dobney2016). Dietary analysis of stable isotopes may also help to identify early canids in close contact with humans (Ewersen et al. Reference Ewersen, Ziegler, Ramminger and Schmölcke2018). Ultimately, a combination of these methods will best promote the identification of the earliest domesticated dogs (and other domesticated species).

The Stilwell II and Koster dogs were contemporaneous medium-sized adults with very active lifestyles and surprisingly varied morphologies for their proximity in space and time. Their stable isotope values reflect a C3-dominated Early Archaic landscape and substantial freshwater fish consumption. Early American dogs likely played key cultural and ecological roles in the movement and adaptation of migrating human populations, and their intentional burial suggests they were important to human domesticity in the Americas by 10,000 years ago. Similar burials in other temperate hunter-gatherer contexts have been associated with the dog's importance in hunting techniques as people adapted to changing environments and prey during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition, and with the dog's subsequent elevation in social status (Perri Reference Perri2014, Reference Perri2016b). The intentional burial of the Koster and Stilwell II dogs may reflect a similar importance of hunting dogs in the deciduous forest environment of the midcontinent.

The dating of the Stilwell II dog to around 10,000 years ago, coinciding with similar dates for the Koster dogs, adds a further early specimen to the precontact dog record and identifies the lower Illinois River valley as an important site of early North American domestic dog activity. These new dates potentially extend the presence of North American dogs into the Paleoindian period. They also confirm the Stilwell II and Koster specimens as the earliest securely identified skeletal remains of dogs in the Americas and the earliest examples of intentional individual dog burials in the worldwide archaeological record.Footnote 1 Future evaluation of faunal remains from Clovis, Western Stemmed, and earlier sites may further identify domesticated dogs in the earlier Paleoindian record, supporting their arrival with the first human migrations into the Americas. Alternatively, the timing and location of these earliest dogs may suggest a later arrival with subsequent early human migrations.

Acknowledgements

We thank the Illinois State Museum for access to the faunal collections; the Center for American Archeology for use of the Koster excavation photograph; and Doug Carr and Claire Martin for additional material photographs. We also thank Bonnie Styles, Dee Ann Watt, Mike Wiant, Beckie Dyer, Mike Kolb, Jim Theler, Kris Hedman, and Tom Emerson for their assistance as well as Ken Ames, Torben Rick, Ted Goebel, and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on the manuscript. ISAS would particularly like to acknowledge Bob Perino for the generous donation of his father's material from the Stilwell II site. Funding was provided by the Illinois State Museum Society, the ETSU Center of Excellence in Paleontology, the Rosemary Cramp Travel Fund, and the R. Bruce McMillan Museum Research Internship (A.R.P).

Data Availability Statement

Morphosource provides 3-D mandible models of the Koster F2256 dog (http://www.morphosource.org/Detail/SpecimenDetail/Show/specimen_id/10494) and the Stilwell II dog (http://www.morphosource.org/Detail/SpecimenDetail/Show/specimen_id/10495).

Supplemental Materials

For supplementary material accompanying this paper, visit https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.74

Supplemental Text. The Stilwell II Site.

Supplemental Table 1. Measurements of the Stilwell II and Koster Dogs.

Supplemental Table 2. Skeletal Pathology Observations of the Stilwell II Dog.

Supplemental Table 3. Supplemental Table 3. Comparative Measurements on “Length of Carnassial M1” (VDD13L) and “Height of Mandible Behind M1” (VDD19).

Supplemental Table 4. Stable Isotope Results of Archaeological Dog, Archaeological Human, Archaeological Fish, Modern Deer, and Modern Wolf.

Footnotes

1. Although an individual dog burial has been reported from the Siberian Beringian site of Ushki-1 (layer 6 [Dikov Reference Dikov1979]) that dates to around 12,000 years ago (Goebel et al. Reference Goebel, Slobodin and Waters2010), by all accounts these remains were identified only via photograph in the 1970s and were presumably not collected due to poor preservation conditions at the site (Ted Goebel, personal communication 2018; Pitulko and Kasparov Reference Pitulko and Kasparov2017), thus they have never been confirmed as a dog or directly dated.

References

References Cited

Ahler, Steven R. 1993 Stratigraphy and Radiocarbon Chronology of Modoc Rock Shelter, Illinois. American Antiquity 58:462489.Google Scholar
Ameen, Carly, Hulme-Beaman, Ardern, Evin, Allowen, Germonpré, Mietje, Britton, Kate, Cucchi, Thomas, Larson, Greger, and Dobney, Keith 2017 A Landmark-Based Approach for Assessing the Reliability of Mandibular Tooth Crowding as a Marker of Dog Domestication. Journal of Archaeological Science 85:4150.Google Scholar
Axelsson, Erik, Ratnakumar, Abhirami, Arendt, Maja-Louise, Maqbool, Khurram, Webster, Matthew T., Perloski, Michele, Liberg, Olof, Arnemo, Jon M., Hedhammar, Åke, and Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin 2013 The Genomic Signature of Dog Domestication Reveals Adaptation to a Starch-Rich Diet. Nature 495(7441):360.Google Scholar
Baker, Richard G., Maher, Louis J., Chumbley, Craig A., and Van Zant, Kent L. 1992 Patterns of Holocene Environmental Change in the Midwestern United States. Quaternary Research 37:379389.Google Scholar
Beebe, B. F. 1980 A Domestic Dog (Canis familiaris L.) of Probable Pleistocene Age from Old Crow, Yukon Territory, Canada. Canadian Journal of Archaeology=Journal Canadien d'Archéologie 4:161168.Google Scholar
Boudadi-Maligne, Myriam, and Escarguel, Gilles 2014 A Biometric Re-evaluation of Recent Claims for Early Upper Palaeolithic Wolf Domestication in Eurasia. Journal of Archaeological Science 45:8089.Google Scholar
Bozell, John R. 1988 Changes in the Role of the Dog in Protohistoric–Historic Pawnee Culture. Plains Anthropologist 33:95111.Google Scholar
Braje, Todd J., Dillehay, Tom D., Erlandson, Jon M., Klein, Richard G., and Rick, Torben C. 2017 Finding the First Americans. Science 358(6363):592594.Google Scholar
Brown, Sarah K., Darwent, Christyann M., and Sacks, Benjamin N. 2013 Ancient DNA Evidence for Genetic Continuity in Arctic Dogs. Journal of Archaeological Science 40(2):12791288.Google Scholar
Brown, James A., and Vierra, Robert K. 1983 What Happened in the Middle Archaic? Introduction to an Ecological Approach to Koster Site Archaeology . Academic Press, Orlando, Florida.Google Scholar
Brugam, Richard B., Little, Kayla, Kohn, Luci, Brunkow, Paul, Vogel, Gregory, and Martin, Terrance 2017 Tracking Change in the Illinois River Using Stable Isotopes in Modern and Ancient Fishes. River Research and Applications 33(3):341352.Google Scholar
Buikstra, Jane E., Rose, Jerome C., and Milner, George R. 1994 A Carbon Isotopic Perspective on Dietary Variation in Late Prehistoric Western Illinois. In Agricultural Origins and Development in the Midcontinent, edited by Green, William pp. 15170. Office of the State Archaeologist, Iowa City, Iowa.Google Scholar
Butzer, Karl W. 1978 Changing Holocene Environments at the Koster Site: A Geo-Archaeological Perspective. American Antiquity 43:408413.Google Scholar
Camarós, Edgard, Münzel, Susanne C., Cueto, Marián, Rivals, Florent, and Conard, Nicholas J. 2016 The Evolution of Paleolithic Hominin–Carnivore Interaction Written in Teeth: Stories from the Swabian Jura (Germany). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 6:798809.Google Scholar
Carbaugh, Aimee E., Headley, Amanda, and Fort, Matthew 2018 Human Remains Analysis Results and Interpretation. In The Broglio Site: A Late Middle Archaic Habitation and Mortuary Site in the Big Muddy Watershed. Illinois State Archaeological Survey Research Report No. 49. Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.Google Scholar
Cormie, A. B., and Schwarcz, H. P. 1994 Stable Isotopes of Nitrogen and Carbon of North American White-Tailed Deer and Implications for Paleodietary and Other Food Web Studies. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 107(3-4):227241.Google Scholar
Crockford, Susan J., and Kuzmin, Yaroslav 2012 Comments on Germonpré et al., Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 2009 “Fossil Dogs and Wolves from Palaeolithic Sites in Belgium, the Ukraine and Russia: Osteometry, Ancient DNA and Stable Isotopes”, and Germonpré, Lázkičková-Galetová, and Sablin, Journal of Archaeological Science 39, 2012 “Palaeolithic Dog Skulls at the Gravettian Předmostí Site, the Czech Republic”. Journal of Archaeological Science 39(8):27972801.Google Scholar
Darwent, Christann M., and Gilliland, J. Eric 2001 Osteological Analysis of Domestic Dogs from Burials in Southern Missouri. Missouri Archaeology 62:149169.Google Scholar
DeBowes, Linda J., Mosier, Derek, Logan, E., Harvey, C. E., Lowry, S., and Richardson, D. C. 1996 Association of Periodontal Disease and Histologic Lesions in Multiple Organs from 45 Dogs. Journal of Veterinary Dentistry 13(2):5760.Google Scholar
Dikov, Nikolay N. 1979 Drevniye kul'tury severo-vostochnoy Azii. Aziya na styke s Amerikoy v drevnosti [Ancient Cultures of Northeast Asia: Asia at the Junction with America in Antiquity], Nauka, Moscow (in Russian).Google Scholar
Dillehay, Tom D., Ocampo, Carlos, Saavedra, José, Sawakuchi, Andre Oliveira, Vega, Rodrigo M., Pino, Mario, Collins, Michael B., Cummings, Linda Scott, Arregui, Iván, Villagran, Ximena S., Hartmann, Gelvam A., Mella, Mauricio, González, Andrea, and Dix, George 2015 New Archaeological Evidence for an Early Human Presence at Monte Verde, Chile. PLoS ONE 10(11):e0141923. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0141923, accessed June 12, 2018.Google Scholar
Ding, Zhao-Li, Oskarsson, Mattias, Ardalan, Arman, Angleby, Helen, Dahlgren, Lars-Göran, Tepeli, Cafer, Kirkness, Ewen, Savolainen, Peter, and Zhang, Ya-Ping 2012 Origins of Domestic Dog in Southern East Asia Is Supported by Analysis of Y-chromosome DNA. Heredity 108(5):507.Google Scholar
Doherty, Tim S., Dickman, Chris R., Glen, Alistair S., Newsome, Thomas M., Nimmo, Dale G., Ritchie, Euan G., Vanak, Abi T., and Wirsing, Aaron J.. 2017 The Global Impacts of Domestic Dogs on Threatened Vertebrates. Biological Conservation 210:5659.Google Scholar
Drake, Abby G., Coquerelle, Michael, and Colombeau, Guillaume 2015 3D Morphometric Analysis of Fossil Canid Skulls Contradicts the Suggested Domestication of Dogs during the Late Paleolithic. Scientific Reports 5:8299. DOI: 10.1038/srep08299, accessed December 1, 2017.Google Scholar
Drake, Abby G., Coquerelle, Michael, Kosintsev, Pavel A., Bachura, Olga P., Sablin, Mikhail, Gusev, Andrei V., Fleming, Lacey S., and Losey, Robert J. 2017 Three-Dimensional Geometric Morphometric Analysis of Fossil Canid Mandibles and Skulls. Scientific Reports 7(1):9508.Google Scholar
Druzhkova, Anna S., Thalmann, Olaf, Trifonov, Vladimir A., Leonard, Jennifer A., Vorobieva, Nadezhda V., Ovodov, Nikolai D., Graphodatsky, Alexander S., and Wayne, Robert K. 2013 Ancient DNA Analysis Affirms the Canid from Altai as a Primitive Dog. PLoS ONE 8(3):e57754.Google Scholar
Easton, Norman A., Mackay, Glen R., Young, Patricia B., Schnurr, Peter, and Yesner, David R. 2011 Chindadn in Canada? Emergent Evidence of the Pleistocene Transition in Southeast Beringia as Revealed by the Little John Site, Yukon. In From the Yenisei to the Yukon: Interpreting Lithic Assemblage Variability in Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene Beringia, edited by Goebel, Ted and Buvit, Ian, pp. 289307, Texas A&M University Press, College Station.Google Scholar
Emerson, Thomas E., Hedman, Kristin M., and Simon, Mary L. 2005 Marginal Horticulturalists or Maize Agriculturalists? Archaeobotanical, Paleopathological, and Isotopic Evidence Relating to Langford Tradition Maize Consumption. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 30:67118.Google Scholar
Erlandson, Jon M., Rick, Torben C., Braje, Todd J., Casperson, Molly, Culleton, Brendan, Fulfrost, Brian, Garcia, Tracy, Guthrie, Daniel A., Jew, Nicholas, Kennett, Douglas J., Moss, Madonna L., Reeder, Leslie, Skinner, Craig, Watts, Jack, Willis, Lauren 2011 Paleoindian Seafaring, Maritime Technologies, and Coastal Foraging on California's Channel Islands. Science 331:11811185.Google Scholar
Evin, Allowen, Souter, Thibaud, Hulme-Beaman, Ardern, Ameen, Carly, Allen, Richard, Viacava, Pietro, Larson, Greger, Cucchi, Thomas, and Dobney, Keith 2016 The Use of Close-Range Photogrammetry in Zooarchaeology: Creating Accurate 3D Models of Wolf Crania to Study Dog Domestication. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 9 8793.Google Scholar
Ewersen, Jörg, Ziegler, Stefan, Ramminger, Britta, and Schmölcke, Ulrich 2018 Stable Isotopic Ratios from Mesolithic and Neolithic Canids as an Indicator of Human Economic and Ritual Activity Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 17:346357.Google Scholar
Fiedel, Stuart J. 2005 Man's Best Friend–Mammoth's Worst Enemy? A Speculative Essay on the Role of Dogs in Paleoindian Colonization and Megafaunal Extinction. World Archaeology 37:1125.Google Scholar
Fort, Matthew A., Hedman, Kristin M., and Ambrose, Stanley H. 2016 Stable Isotope Analysis of Diet in a Sample of Human and Mammal Bone. In The Tree Row Site: A Late Archaic Habitation and Mortuary Site in the Central Illinois Valley, edited by McElrath, Dale L. and Evans, Madeleine G., pp. 215221, Illinois State Archaeological Survey, Prairie Research Institute, Urbana-Champaign.Google Scholar
Fox-Dobbs, Kena, Bump, J.K., Peterson, R.O., Fox, D. L., and Koch, P.L. 2007 Carnivore-Specific Stable Isotope Variables and Variation in the Foraging Ecology of Modern and Ancient Wolf Populations: Case Studies from Isle Royale, Minnesota, and La Brea. Canadian Journal of Zoology 85(4):458471.Google Scholar
Frantz, Laurent A., Mullin, Victoria E., Pionnier-Capitan, Maud, Lebrasseur, Ophélie, Ollivier, Morgane, Perri, Angela, Linderholm, Anna, Mattiangeli, Valeria, Teasdale, Matthew D., Dimopoulos, Evangelos A., Tresset, Anne, Duffraisse, Marilyne, McCormick, Finbar, Bartosiewicz, László, Gál, Erika, Nyerges, Éva A., Sablin, Mikhail V., Bréhard, Stéphanie, Mashkour, Marjan, Bălăşescu, Adrian, Gillet, Benjamin, Hughes, Sandrine, Chassaing, Olivier, Hitte, Christophe, Vigne, Jean-Denis, Dobney, Keith, Hänni, Catherine, Bradley, Daniel G., and Larson, Greger 2016 Genomic and Archaeological Evidence Suggest a Dual Origin of Domestic Dogs. Science 352(6290):12281231.Google Scholar
Freedman, Adam H., Gronau, Ilan, Schweizer, Rena M., Vecchyo, Diego Ortega-Del, Han, Eunjung, Silva, Pedro M., Galaverni, Marco, Fan, Zhenxin, Marx, Peter, Lorente-Galdos, Belen, Beale, Holly, Ramirez, Oscar, Hormozdiari, Farhad, Alkan, Can, Vilà, Carles, Squire, Kevin, Geffen, Eli, Kusak, Josip, Boyko, Adam R., Parker, Heidi G., Lee, Clarence, Tadigotla, Vasisht, Siepel, Adam, Bustamante, Carlos D., Harkins, Timothy T., Nelson, Stanley F., Ostrander, Elaine A., Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Wayne, Robert K., and Novembre, John 2014 Genome Sequencing Highlights the Dynamic Early History of Dogs. PLoS Genetics 10(1):e1004016. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004016, accessed October 25, 2017.Google Scholar
Froehle, Andrew W., Kellner, Corina M., and Schoeninger, Margaret J. 2012 Multivariate Carbon and Nitrogen Stable Isotope Model for the Reconstruction of Prehistoric Human Diet. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 147:352369.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Sablin, Mikhail V., Stevens, Rhiannon E., Hedges, Robert E.M., Hofreiter, Michael, Stiller, Mathias, and Després, Viviane R. 2009 Fossil Dogs and Wolves from Palaeolithic Sites in Belgium, the Ukraine and Russia: Osteometry, Ancient DNA and Stable Isotopes. Journal of Archaeological Science 36:473490.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Sablin, Mikhail V., Després, Viviane, Hofreiter, Michael, Lázničková-Galetová, Martina, Stevens, Rhiannon E., and Stiller, Mathias 2013 Palaeolithic Dogs and the Early Domestication of the Wolf: A Reply to the Comments of Crockford and Kuzmin (2012). Journal of Archaeological Science 40(1):786792.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Lázničková-Galetová, Martina, and Sablin, Mikhail V. 2012 Palaeolithic Dog Skulls at the Gravettian Předmostí Site, the Czech Republic. Journal of Archaeological Science 39(1):184202.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Sablin, Mikhail V., Lázničková-Galetová, Martina, Després, Viviane, Stevens, Rhiannon E., Stiller, Mathias, and Hofreiter, Michael 2015 Palaeolithic Dogs and Pleistocene Wolves Revisited: A Reply to Morey (2014). Journal of Archaeological Science, 54, 210216.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Lázničková-Galetová, Martina, Losey, Robert J., Räikkönen, Jannikke, and Sablin, Mikhail V. 2015 Large Canids at the Gravettian Předmostí Site, the Czech Republic: the Mandible. Quaternary International 359:261279.Google Scholar
Germonpré, Mietje, Fedorov, Sergey, Danilov, Petr, Galeta, Patrik, Jimenez, Elodie-Laure, Sablin, Mikhail, and Losey, Robert J. 2017 Palaeolithic and Prehistoric Dogs and Pleistocene Wolves from Yakutia: Identification of Isolated Skulls. Journal of Archaeological Science 78:119.Google Scholar
Goebel, Ted, Slobodin, Sergei B., and Waters, Michael R. 2010 New Dates from Ushki-1, Kamchatka, Confirm 13,000 cal BP Age for Earliest Paleolithic Occupation. Journal of Archaeological Science 37(10):26402649.Google Scholar
Gowlett, John A., Hedges, R. E. M., Law, I. A., and Perry, C. 1987 Radiocarbon Dates from the Oxford AMS System: Archaeometry Datelist 5. Archaeometry 29:125155.Google Scholar
Grayson, Donald K., Parmalee, Paul W., Lyman, R. Lee, and Mead, Jim I. 1988 Danger Cave, Last Supper Cave, and Hanging Rock Shelter: The Faunas. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History Vol. 66(1). American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Haag, William G. 1970 Dog Remains from Hogup Cave. In Hogup Cave, edited by Aikens, Melvin, pp. 273274. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, Volume 84, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Hajic, Edwin R. 1990 Koster Site Archaeology I: Stratigraphy and Landscape Evolution (No. 8). Center for American Archeology Press, Kampsville, IL.Google Scholar
Halligan, Jessi J., Waters, Michael R., Perrotti, Angelina, Owens, Ivy J., Feinberg, Joshua M., Bourne, Mark D., Fenerty, Brendan, Winsborough, Barbara, Carlson, David, Fisher, Daniel C., Stafford, Thomas W. Jr., and Dunbar, James S. 2016 Pre-Clovis Occupation 14,550 Years Ago at the Page-Ladson Site, Florida, and the Peopling of the Americas. Science Advances 2(5):e1600375.DOI:10.1126/sciadv.1600375, accessed September 20, 2017.Google Scholar
Harcourt, Ralph A. 1974 The Dog in Prehistoric and Early Historic Britain. Journal of Archaeological Science 1(2):151175.Google Scholar
Hargrave, Eve A., Hedman, Kristin M., and Wolf, Rebecca 2006 Isolated Human Burial at the Kaskaskia Mine Site (11R687), Randolph County, Illinois. Transportation Archaeological Research Reports No. 104, Illinois Transportation Archaeological Research Program, Champaign.Google Scholar
Harington, Charles R. (editor) 2003 Annotated Bibliography of Quaternary Vertebrates of Northern North America: With Radiocarbon Dates. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.Google Scholar
Heaton, Tim H.E., Vogel, John C., von La Chevallerie, Gertrud, and Collett, Gill 1986 Climatic Influence on the Isotopic Composition of Bone Nitrogen. Nature 322:822824.Google Scholar
Hedman, Kristin, Hargrave, Eve A., and Ambrose, Stanley H. 2002 Late Mississippian Diet in the American Bottom: Stable Isotope Analyses of Bone Collagen and Apatite. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 27(2):237271.Google Scholar
Hill, Frederick C. 1972 A Middle Archaic Dog Burial in Illinois. Foundation for Illinois Archaeology, Evanston.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Martin, Pearce, Christof, Cronin, Thomas M., Backman, Jan, Anderson, Leif G., Barrientos, Natalia, Björk, Göran, Coxall, Helen, de Boer, Agatha, Mayer, Larry A., Mörth, Carl-Magnus, Nilsson, Johan, Rattray, Jayne E., Stranne, Christian, Semiletov, Igor, and O'Regan, Matt 2017 Post-glacial Flooding of the Bering Land Bridge Dated to 11 cal ka BP Based on New Geophysical and Sediment Records. Climate of the Past 13(8):9911005.Google Scholar
Janssens, Luc, Spanoghe, Inge, Miller, Rebecca, and Van Dongen, Stefan 2016 Can Orbital Angle Morphology Distinguish Dogs from Wolves? Zoomorphology 135(1):149158.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Dennis L., Davis, Loren G., Stafford, Thomas W. Jr., Campos, Paula F., Connolly, Thomas J., Cummings, Linda Scott, Hofreiter, Michael, Hockett, Bryan, McDonough, Katelyn, Luthe, Ian, O'Grady, Patrick W., Swisher, Mark E., White, Frances, Yates, Bonnie, Yohe, Robert M. II, Yost, Chad, and Willerslev, Eske 2013 Geochronology, Archaeological Context, and DNA at the Paisley Caves. In Paleoamerican Odyssey, edited by Graf, Kelly E., Ketron, Caroline V., and Waters, Michael R., pp. 485510. Texas A&M University Press, College Station.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne 1989 Stable Isotope Analysis of Archaeological Faunal Remains from Southern Ontario. Journal of Archaeological Science 16(3):319329.Google Scholar
Komar, Debra, and Buikstra, Jane E. 2003 Differential Diagnosis of a Prehistoric Biological Object from the Koster (Illinois) Site. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 13(3):157164.Google Scholar
Koop, Ben F., Burbidge, Maryann, Byun, Ashley, Rink, U., and Crockford, Susan J. 2000 Ancient DNA Evidence of a Separate Origin for North American Indigenous Dogs. BAR International Series 889:271286.Google Scholar
Lapham, Heather A. 2010 A Baumer Phase Dog Burial from the Kincaid Site in Southern Illinois. Illinois Archaeology 22:437463.Google Scholar
Larson, Greger, Karlsson, Elinor K., Perri, Angela, Webster, Matthew T., Ho, Simon Y.W., Peters, Joris, Stahl, Peter W., Piper, Philip J., Lingaas, Frode, Fredholm, Merete, Comstock, Kenine E., Modiano, Jaime F., Schelling, Claude, Agoulnik, Alexander I., Leegwater, Peter A., Dobney, Keith, Vigne, Jean-Denis, Vilà, Carles, Andersson, Leif, and Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin 2012 Rethinking Dog Domestication by Integrating Genetics, Archeology, and Biogeography. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109(23):88788883.Google Scholar
Lawler, Dennis F., and Evans, R.H. 2016 Evaluation of Femoral Head and Neck New Bone from a Grey Wolf (Canis lupus lupus): When Is It Pathology? Journal of Veterinary Anatomy 9(1):3946.Google Scholar
Lawler, Dennis F., Widga, Chris, Rubin, David A., Reetz, Jennifer A., Evans, Richard H., Tangredi, Basil P., Thomas, Richard M., Martin, Terrance J., Hildebolt, Charles, Smith, Kirk, Leib, Daniel, Sackman, Jill E., Avery, James G., and Smith, Gail K. 2016 Differential Diagnosis of Vertebral Spinous Process Deviations in Archaeological and Modern Domestic Dogs. Journal of Archaeological Science 9:5463.Google Scholar
Lawler, Dennis F., Widga, Chris, and Smith, Gail 2017 Observations of the Acetabulum and Proximal Femur of the Dire Wolf. Journal of Veterinary Anatomy 10(1):7383.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Barbara 1967 Early Domestic Dogs. Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde [Mammalian Biology] 32(1):4459.Google Scholar
Leonard, Jennifer A., Wayne, Robert K., Wheeler, Jane, Valadez, Raúl, Guillén, Sonia, and Vilà, Carles 2002 Ancient DNA Evidence for Old World Origin of New World Dogs. Science 298(5598):16131616.Google Scholar
Llamas, Bastien, Fehren-Schmitz, Lars, Valverde, Guido, Soubrier, Julien, Mallick, Swapan, Rohland, Nadin, Nordenfelt, Susanne, Valdiosera, Cristina, Richards, Stephen M., Rohrlach, Adam, Barreto Romero, Maria Inés, Espinoza, Isabel Flores, Cagigao, Elsa Tomasto, Jiménez, Lucía Watson, Makowski, Krzysztof, Leboreiro Reyna, Ilán Santiago, Lory, Josefina Mansilla, Ballivián Torrez, Julio Alejandro, Rivera, Mario A., Burger, Richard L., Ceruti, Maria Constanza, Reinhard, Johan, Wells, R. Spencer, Politis, Gustavo, Santoro, Calogero M., Standen, Vivien G., Smith, Colin, Reich, David, Ho, Simon Y. W., Cooper, Alan, and Haak, Wolfgang 2016 Ancient Mitochondrial DNA Provides High-Resolution Time Scale of the Peopling of the Americas. Science Advances, 2(4):e1501385. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1501385, accessed on September 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Longin, Robert 1971 New Method of Collagen Extraction for Radiocarbon Dating. Nature 230(5291):241242.Google Scholar
Losey, Robert J., Osipov, Benjamin, Sivakumaran, Rajitha, Nomokonova, Tatiana, Kovychev, Evgenii V., and Diatchina, Natalia G. 2014 Estimating Body Mass in Dogs and Wolves Using Cranial and Mandibular Dimensions: Application to Siberian Canids. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 25(6):946959.Google Scholar
Losey, Robert J., McLachlin, K., Nomokonova, T., Latham, K., and Harrington, L. 2016 Body Mass Estimates in Dogs and North American Gray Wolves Using Limb Element Dimensions. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 27(2):180191.Google Scholar
Lyman, R. Lee 2013 Paleoindian Exploitation of Mammals in Eastern Washington State. American Antiquity 78:227247.Google Scholar
McMillan, R. Bruce 1970 Early Canid Burial from the Western Ozark Highland. Science, 167(3922):12461247.Google Scholar
Meltzer, David J. 2009 First Peoples in a New World: Colonizing Ice Age America. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Miller, Malcolm E., Evans, Howard E., and Christensen, George C. 1979 Miller's Anatomy of the Dog. 2nd ed. WB Saunders Co., PhiladelphiaGoogle Scholar
Monzón, J., Kays, R., and Dykhuizen, D. E. 2014 Assessment of Coyote–Wolf–Dog Admixture Using Ancestry-Informative Diagnostic SNPs. Molecular Ecology, 23(1):182197.Google Scholar
Moreno-Mayar, J. Víctor, Potter, Ben A., Vinner, Lasse, Steinrücken, Matthias, Rasmussen, Simon, Terhorst, Jonathan, Kamm, John A., Albrechtsen, Anders, Malaspinas, Anna-Sapfo, Sikora, Martin, Reuther, Joshua D., Irish, Joel D., Malhi, Ripan S., Orlando, Ludovic, Song, Yun S., Nielsen, Rasmus, Meltzer, David J., and Willerslev, Eske 2018 Terminal Pleistocene Alaskan Genome Reveals First Founding Population of Native Americans. Nature 553(7687): 203207.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F. 1992 Size, Shape and Development in the Evolution of the Domestic Dog. Journal of Archaeological Science 19(2):181204.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F. 2006 Burying Key Evidence: The Social Bond between Dogs and People. Journal of Archaeological Science 33(2):158175.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F. 2010 Dogs: Domestication and the Development of a Social Bond. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F., and Aaris-Sørensen, Kim 2002 Paleoeskimo Dogs of the Eastern Arctic. Arctic 55(1):4456.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F., and Jeger, Rujana 2015 Paleolithic Dogs: Why Sustained Domestication Then? Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 3:420428.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F., and Jeger, Rujana 2017 From Wolf to Dog: Late Pleistocene Ecological Dynamics, Altered Trophic Strategies, and Shifting Human Perceptions. Historical Biology 29(7):895903.Google Scholar
Morey, Darcy F., and Wiant, Michael D. 1992 Early Holocene Domestic Dog Burials from the North American Midwest. Current Anthropology 33(2):224229.Google Scholar
Mueller, Melissa, Goebel, Ted, Esdale, Julie, and Graf, Kelly 2015 Archaeology of the Terminal Pleistocene McDonald Creek Site, Central Alaska. Paper presented at the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California.Google Scholar
Munyikwa, Kennedy, Rittenour, Tammy M., and Feathers, James K. 2017 Temporal Constraints for the Late Wisconsinan Deglaciation of Western Canada using Eolian Dune Luminescence Chronologies from Alberta. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 470:147165.Google Scholar
Mustonen, Anne-Mari, Lawler, Dennis F., Ahola, Leena, Koistinen, Tarja, Jalkanen, Liisa, Mononen, Jaakko, Lamidi, Marja-Leena, and Nieminen, Petteri 2017 Skeletal Pathology of Farm-Reared Obese Juvenile Blue Foxes (Vulpes lagopus). Journal of Veterinary Anatomy 10(2):5174.Google Scholar
Nelson, David M., Hu, Feng Sheng, Grimm, Eric C., Curry, B. Brandon, and Slate, Jennifer E. 2006 The Influence of Aridity and Fire on Holocene Prairie Communities in the Eastern Prairie Peninsula. Ecology 87(10): 25232536.Google Scholar
Neusius, Sarah 1996 Koster Site. In The Oxford Companion to Archaeology, edited by Fagan, Brian M., p. 377. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Ní Leathlobhair, Máire Ní, Perri, Angela R., Irving-Pease, Evan K., Witt, Kelsey E., Linderholm, Anna, Haile, James, Lebrasseur, Ophelie, Ameen, Carly, Blick, Jeffrey, Boyko, Adam R., Brace, Selina, Cortes, Yahaira Nunes, Crockford, Susan J., Devault, Alison, Dimopoulos, Evangelos A., Eldridge, Morley, Enk, Jacob, Gori, Kevin, Gopalakrishnan, Shyam, Grimes, Vaughan, Guiry, Eric, Hansen, Anders J., Hulme-Beaman, Ardern, Johnson, John, Kitchen, Andrew, Kasparov, Aleksei K., Kwon, Young-Mi, Nikolskiy, Pavel A., Lope, Carlos Peraza, Manin, Aurélie, Martin, Terrance, Meyer, Michael, Myers, Kelsey Noack, Omura, Mark, Rouillard, Jean-Marie, Pavlova, Elena Y., Sciulli, Paul, Sinding, Mikkel-Holger S., Strakova, Andrea, Ivanova, Varvara V., Widga, Christopher, Willerslev, Eske, Pitulko, Vladimir V., Barnes, Ian, Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Dobney, Keith M., Malhi, Ripan S., Murchison, Elizabeth P., Larson, Greger, and Frantz, Laurent A. F. 2018 The Evolutionary History of Dogs in the Americas. Science 361(6397):8185.Google Scholar
Olsen, Stanley J. 1985 Origins of the Domestic Dog: the Fossil Record. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Ovodov, Nikolai D., Crockford, Susan J., Kuzmin, Yaroslav V., Higham, Thomas FG, Hodgins, Gregory WL, and van der Plicht, Johannes 2011 A 33,000-Year-Old Incipient Dog from the Altai Mountains of Siberia: Evidence of the Earliest Domestication Disrupted by the Last Glacial Maximum. PLoS ONE 6(7):e22821. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022821, accessed on September 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Perino, Gregory 1970 The Stilwell II Site, Pike County, Illinois. Central States Archaeological Journal 17(3):118122.Google Scholar
Perino, Gregory 1977 Points and Barbs: an Editorial. Central States Archaeological Journal 46(4):99100.Google Scholar
Perri, Angela 2014 Global Hunting Adaptations to Early Holocene Temperate Forests: Intentional Dog Burials as Evidence of Hunting Strategies. PhD dissertation, Department of Archaeology, Durham University.Google Scholar
Perri, Angela 2016a A Wolf in Dog's Clothing: Initial Dog Domestication and Pleistocene Wolf Variation. Journal of Archaeological Science 68:14.Google Scholar
Perri, Angela 2016b Hunting Dogs as Environmental Adaptations in Jōmon Japan. Antiquity 90(353):11661180.Google Scholar
Perri, Angela 2017 A Typology of Dog Deposition in Archaeological Contexts. In Economic Zooarchaeology: Studies in Hunting, Herding and Early Agriculture, edited by Rowley-Conwy, Peter, Serjeantson, Dale, and Halstead, Paul, pp. 8999. Oxbow Books, Oxford.Google Scholar
Perri, Angela R., Smith, Geoffrey M., and Bosch, Marjolein D. 2015 Comment on “How Do You Kill 86 Mammoths? Taphonomic Investigations of Mammoth Megasites” by Pat Shipman. Quaternary International 368(11):3846.Google Scholar
Pitulko, Vladimir V., and Kasparov, Aleksey K. 2017 Archaeological Dogs from the Early Holocene Zhokhov Site in the Eastern Siberian Arctic. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 13:491515.Google Scholar
Polischuk, S., Hobson, K., and Ramsay, M. 2001 Use of Stable-Carbon and -Nitrogen Isotopes to Assess Weaning and Fasting in Female Polar Bears and Their Cubs. Canadian Journal of Zoology 79: 499511.Google Scholar
Potter, Ben A., Reuther, Joshua D., Holliday, Vance T., Holmes, Charles E., Miller, D. Shane, and Schmuck, Nicholas 2017 Early Colonization of Beringia and Northern North America: Chronology, Routes, and Adaptive Strategies. Quaternary International 444(B): 3655.Google Scholar
Reimer, Paula J., Bard, Edouard, Bayliss, Alex, Beck, J. Warren, Blackwell, Paul G., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Buck, Caitlin E., Cheng, Hai, Edwards, R. Lawrence, Friedrich, Michael, Grootes, Pieter M., Guilderson, Thomas P., Haflidason, Haflidi, Hajdas, Irka, Hatté, Christine, Heaton, Timothy J., Hoffmann, Dirk L., Hogg, Alan G., Hughen, Konrad A., Kaiser, K. Felix, Kromer, Bernd, Manning, Sturt W., Niu, Mu, Reimer, Ron W., Richards, David A., Scott, E. Marian, Southon, John R., Staff, Richard A., Turney, Christian S. M., and van der Plicht, Johannes 2013 IntCal13 and MARINE13 Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curves 0–50000 years calBP. Radiocarbon 55(4):18691887.Google Scholar
Sablin, Mikhail, and Khlopachev, Gennady 2002 The Earliest Ice Age Dogs: Evidence from Eliseevichi. Current Anthropology 43(5):795799.Google Scholar
Saunders, Jeffrey J., and Daeschler, Edward B. 1994 Descriptive Analyses and Taphonomical Observations of Culturally-Modified Mammoths Excavated at “The Gravel Pit,” Near Clovis, New Mexico in 1936. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 145:128.Google Scholar
Savolainen, Peter, Zhang, Ya-ping, Luo, Jing, Lundeberg, Joakim, and Leitner, Thomas 2002 Genetic Evidence for an East Asian Origin of Domestic Dogs Science 298(5598):16101613.Google Scholar
Schober, Teresa 1998 Reinvestigation of Maize Introduction in West-Central Illinois: A Stable Isotope Analysis of Bone Collagen and Apatite Carbonate from Late Archaic to Mississippian Times. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana.Google Scholar
Schoeninger, Margaret J., and DeNiro, Michael J. 1984 Nitrogen and Carbon Isotopic Composition of Bone Collagen from Marine and Terrestrial Animals. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 48(4):625639.Google Scholar
Schwartz, Marion 1998 A History of Dogs in the Early Americas. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Shannon, Laura M., Boyko, Ryan H., Castelhano, Marta, Corey, Elizabeth, Hayward, Jessica J., McLean, Corin, White, Michelle E., Said, Mounir Abi, Anita, Baddley A., Bondjengo, Nono Ikombe, Calero, Jorge, Galov, Ana, Hedimbi, Marius, Imam, Bulu, Khalap, Rajashree, Lally, Douglas, Masta, Andrew, Oliveira, Kyle C., Pérez, Lucía, Randall, Julia, Tam, Nguyen Minh, Trujillo-Cornejo, Francisco J., Valeriano, Carlos, Sutter, Nathan B., Todhunter, Rory J., Bustamante, Carlos D., and Boyko, Adam R. 2015 Genetic Structure in Village Dogs Reveals a Central Asian Domestication Origin. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112(44):1363913644.Google Scholar
Shipman, Pat 2015 How Do You Kill 86 Mammoths? Taphonomic Investigations of Mammoth Megasites. Quaternary International 359:3846.Google Scholar
Skoglund, Pontus, and Reich, David 2016 A Genomic View of the Peopling of the Americas. Current Opinion in Genetics & Development 41:2735.Google Scholar
Skoglund, Pontus, Ersmark, Erik, Palkopoulou, Eleftheria, and Dalén, Love 2015 Ancient Wolf Genome Reveals an Early Divergence of Domestic Dog Ancestors and Admixture into High-Latitude Breeds. Current Biology 25(11):15151519.Google Scholar
Smallwood, Ashley M., and Jennings, Thomas (editors) 2014 Clovis: on the Edge of a New Understanding. Texas A&M University Press, College Station.Google Scholar
Stanford, Dennis J. 1978 The Jones-Miller Site: An Example of Hell Gap Bison Procurement Strategy. Plains Anthropologist 23(82):9097.Google Scholar
Stanford, Dennis J., and Stenger, Alison (editors) 2014 Pre-Clovis in the Americas: International Science Conference Proceedings Held at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Reimer, Paula J., and Reimer, R. W. 2017 CALIB 7.1. Electronic document, http://calib.org, accessed July 12, 2017.Google Scholar
Styles, Bonnie W., and McMillan, R. Bruce 2009 Archaic Faunal Exploitation in the Prairie Peninsula and Surrounding Regions of the Midcontinent. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity Across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 3980. SUNY Press, Albany, New York.Google Scholar
Thalmann, Olaf, Shapiro, Beth, Cui, Pin, Schuenemann, Verena J., Sawyer, Susanna K., Greenfield, D. L., Germonpré, Mietje B., Sablin, Mikhail V., López-Giráldez, F., Domingo-Roura, X., Napierala, Hannes, Uerpmann, H-P., Loponte, D. M., Acosta, A. A., Giemsch, L., Schmitz, Ralf W., Worthington, Brian, Buikstra, Jane E., Druzhkova, A., Graphodatsky, A. S., Ovodov, Nikolai D., Wahlberg, N., Freedman, Adam H., Schweizer, R. M., Koepfli, K. P., Leonard, Jennifer A., Meyer, Matthias, Krause, Johannes, Pääbo, Svante, Green, R. E., and Wayne, Robert K. 2013 Complete Mitochondrial Genomes of Ancient Canids Suggest a European Origin of Domestic Dogs. Science 342(6160):871874.Google Scholar
Tieszen, Larry L. 1991 Natural Variations in the Carbon Isotope Values of Plants: Implications for Archaeology, Ecology, and Paleoecology. Journal of Archaeological Science 18(3):227248.Google Scholar
Tieszen, Larry L., and Fagre, Tim 1993 Effect of Diet Quality and Composition on the Isotopic Composition of Respiratory CO2, Bone Collagen, Bioapatite, and Soft Tissues. In Prehistoric Human Bone: Archaeology at the Molecular Level, edited by Lambert, Joseph B. and Grupe, Gisela, pp. 121155. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Tito, Raul Y., Belknap, Samuel L., Sobolik, Kristin D., Ingraham, Robert C., Cleeland, Lauren M., and Lewis, Cecil M. 2011 Brief Communication: DNA from Early Holocene American Dog. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 145(4):653657.Google Scholar
Tuross, Noreen, Fogel, Marilyn, and Hare, P. E. 1988 Variability in the Preservation of the Isotopic Composition of Collagen from Fossil Bone. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 52(4):929935.Google Scholar
Valadez, Raul, Rodríguez, Bernardo, Manzanilla, Linda, and Tejeda, Samuel 2006 Dog-Wolf Hybrid Biotype Reconstruction from the Archaeological City of Teotihuacan in Prehispanic Central Mexico. In Dogs and People in Social, Working, Economic or Symbolic Interaction, edited by Snyder, Lynn M. and Moore, Elizabeth A., pp. 121131. Oxbow Books, Oxford.Google Scholar
van Asch, Barbara, Zhang, Ai-bing, Oskarsson, Mattias C. R., Klütsch, Cornelya F. C., Amorim, António, and Savolainen, Peter 2013 Pre-Columbian Origins of Native American Dog Breeds, with Only Limited Replacement by European Dogs, Confirmed by mtDNA Analysis. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 280(1766):20131142. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.1142, accessed August 28, 2017.Google Scholar
Vilà, Carles, Savolainen, Peter, Maldonado, Jesús E., Amorim, Isabel R., Rice, John E., Honeycutt, Rodney L., Crandall, Keith A., Lundeberg, Joakim, and Wayne, Robert K. 1997 Multiple and Ancient Origins of the Domestic Dog. Science 276(5319):16871689.Google Scholar
Von den Driesch, Angela 1976 A Guide to the Measurement of Animal Bones from Archaeological Sites: as Developed by the Institut für Palaeoanatomie, Domestikationsforschung und Geschichte der Tiermedizin of the University of Munich (Vol. 1). Peabody Museum Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
vonHoldt, Bridgett, Pollinger, John P., Lohmueller, Kirk E., Han, Eunjung, Parker, Heidi G., Quignon, Pascale, Degenhardt, Jeremiah D., Boyko, Adam R., Earl, Dent A., Auton, Adam, Reynolds, Andy, Bryc, Kasia, Brisbin, Abra, Knowles, James C., Mosher, Dana S., Spady, Tyrone C., Elkahloun, Abdel, Geffen, Eli, Pilot, Malgorzata, Jedrzejewski, Wlodzimierz, Greco, Claudia, Randi, Ettore, Bannasch, Danika, Wilton, Alan, Shearman, Jeremy, Musiani, Marco, Cargill, Michelle, Jones, Paul G., Qian, Zuwei, Huang, Wei, Ding, Zhao-Li, Zhang, Ya-ping, Bustamante, Carlos D., Ostrander, Elaine A., Novembre, John, and Wayne, Robert K. 2010 Genome-wide SNP and Haplotype Analyses Reveal a Rich History Underlying Dog Domestication. Nature 464(7290):898.Google Scholar
Walker, Danny N., and Frison, George C. 1982 Studies on Amerindian Dogs, 3: Prehistoric Wolf/Dog Hybrids from the Northwestern Plains. Journal of Archaeological Science 9(2):125172.Google Scholar
Walker, Renee B., Morey, Darcy F., and Relethford, John. H. 2005 Early and Mid-Holocene Dogs in Southeastern North America: Examples from Dust Cave. Southeast Archaeology 24:8392Google Scholar
Wang, Guo-Dong, Zhai, Weiwei, Yang, He-Chuan, Wang, Lu, Zhong, Li, Liu, Yan-Hu, Fan, Ruo-Xi, Yin, Ting-Ting, Zhu, Chun-Ling, Poyarkov, Andrei D, Irwin, David M, Hytönen, Marjo K., Lohi, Hannes, Wu, Chung-I, Savolainen, Peter, and Zhang, Ya-Ping 2016 Out of Southern East Asia: The Natural History of Domestic Dogs across the World. Cell Research 26(1):21.Google Scholar
Warren, Diane M. 2000 Paleopathology of Archaic Dogs from the North American Southeast. In Dogs Through Time: An Archaeological Perspective, edited by Crockford, Susan J., pp. 93104. BAR International Series 889. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Wayne, Robert K., and Jenks, Susan M. 1991 Mitochondrial DNA Analysis Implying Extensive Hybridization of the Endangered Red Wolf (Canis rufus). Nature 351(6327):565568.Google Scholar
Witt, Kelsey E., Judd, Kathleen, Kitchen, Andrew, Grier, Colin, Kohler, Timothy A., Ortman, Scott G., Kemp, Brian M., and Malhi, Ripan S. 2015 DNA Analysis of Ancient Dogs of the Americas: Identifying Possible Founding Haplotypes and Reconstructing Population Histories. Journal of Human Evolution 79:105118.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Location of the Koster and Stilwell II sites.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Excavation of the Koster F2256 dog burial (photograph by Del Baston, courtesy of the Center for American Archeology).

Figure 2

Figure 3. The Stilwell II dog burial in situ (courtesy of the Illinois State Museum).

Figure 3

Figure 4. Relative size of the Stilwell II and Koster dogs.

Figure 4

Table 1. Shoulder Height and Body Mass Estimates of the Koster and Stilwell II Dogs.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Comparison of left mandibles from (top to bottom) the Stilwell II, Koster F2357, and Koster F2256 dogs.

Figure 6

Figure 6. The left mandible of the Stilwell II dog showing advanced tooth wear.

Figure 7

Table 2. Bone Collagen Radiocarbon Dates and Stable Isotope Values.

Figure 8

Figure 7. Relationship between carnassial length (Von den Driesch 1976, measurement 13L) and mandibular body height (Von den Driesch 1976, measurement 19) among different Canis groups. CS = Cherokee Sewer, Iowa; MD = Modoc Rock Shelter, Illinois; KS = Koster, Illinois (KS1 and 2 included in this study); SM = Simonsen, Iowa; SW = Stilwell II, Illinois. The dotted line connects the left and right mandibles of the same individual. See Supplemental Table 3.

Figure 9

Figure 8. Early Archaic dog δ13Ccoll and δ15Ncoll values, compared to the ranges of modern wolves (Fox-Dobbs et al. 2007), modern deer (Cormie and Schwarcz 1994), and archaeological fish from the Midwest (Brugam et al. 2017). Stable isotope values from Early Archaic (Kaskaskia Mine, N = 1; Hargrave et al. 2006), Middle Archaic (Broglio site, n = 16; Carbaugh et al. 2018), and Late Archaic (Tree Row site, n = 8; Fort et al. 2015) humans, two Late Archaic dogs from the Tree Row site (Fort et al. 2015), and post-maize human diets (N = 64; Hedman et al. 2002) are also included for comparison. All illustrated samples are from the Illinois River valley or the American Bottom. See Supplemental Table 4.

Supplementary material: File

Perri et al. supplementary material

Supplemental Text and Tables S1-S4

Download Perri et al. supplementary material(File)
File 157.2 KB