HUMAN AND ANIMAL BONES

ARC5BON

2020

Credit points: 15

Subject outline

Understanding the interaction between people and animals is vital for explaining past social, political and economic systems from the earliest times to the present day. Morphological changes occur within long-term climatic cycles and therefore we need to understand the processes that influence the trajectory of skeletal change. In addition to this people and animals undergo changes to their skeleton from disease, nutrition, work load, environmental stress and domestication. This information is gleaned from studying a range of different zooarchaeological contexts. These include burials and cemeteries, middens, cave and bony remains from other well-preserved sites. Techniques of analysis for interpreting health, diet, butchery practices, seasonal exploitation, ageing and sex of skeletal remains will be a focus of this subject, as well as the use of quantitative techniques. This subject has a strong practical element and students will learn about the main animal species found archaeologically in south-eastern Australia.

School: Humanities and Social Sciences (Pre 2022)

Credit points: 15

Subject Co-ordinator: Keir Strickland

Available to Study Abroad/Exchange Students: Yes

Subject year level: Year Level 5 - Masters

Available as Elective: No

Learning Activities: N/A

Capstone subject: No

Subject particulars

Subject rules

Prerequisites: Must be enrolled in Master of Professional Archaeology or with the subject Coordinator's approval

Co-requisites: N/A

Incompatible subjects: ARC2ZOO

Equivalent subjects: N/A

Quota Management Strategy: N/A

Quota-conditions or rules: N/A

Special conditions: N/A

Minimum credit point requirement: N/A

Assumed knowledge: N/A

Learning resources

The archaeology of animal bones

Resource Type: Book

Resource Requirement: Recommended

Author: O'Connor, T

Year: 2000

Edition/Volume: N/A

Publisher: SUTTON

ISBN: N/A

Chapter/article title: N/A

Chapter/issue: N/A

URL: N/A

Other description: N/A

Source location: N/A

Australian Zooarchaeology

Resource Type: Book

Resource Requirement: Recommended

Author: LUNA-Insight image database: www.lib.latrobe.edu.au

Year: N/A

Edition/Volume: N/A

Publisher: LA TROBE UNIVERSITY

ISBN: N/A

Chapter/article title: N/A

Chapter/issue: N/A

URL: N/A

Other description: N/A

Source location: N/A

Zooarchaeology

Resource Type: Book

Resource Requirement: Prescribed

Author: Reitz, E. and Wing, E.

Year: N/A

Edition/Volume: N/A

Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

ISBN: N/A

Chapter/article title: N/A

Chapter/issue: N/A

URL: N/A

Other description: N/A

Source location: N/A

Archaeology of animals.

Resource Type: Book

Resource Requirement: Recommended

Author: Davis, S.

Year: 2005

Edition/Volume: N/A

Publisher: ROUTLEDGE

ISBN: N/A

Chapter/article title: N/A

Chapter/issue: N/A

URL: N/A

Other description: N/A

Source location: N/A

Career Ready

Career-focused: No

Work-based learning: No

Self sourced or Uni sourced: N/A

Entire subject or partial subject: N/A

Total hours/days required: N/A

Location of WBL activity (region): N/A

WBL addtional requirements: N/A

Graduate capabilities & intended learning outcomes

Graduate Capabilities

COMMUNICATION - Communicating and Influencing
COMMUNICATION - Cultural Intelligence and Global Perspective
DISCIPLINE KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS
INQUIRY AND ANALYSIS - Creativity and Innovation
INQUIRY AND ANALYSIS - Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
INQUIRY AND ANALYSIS - Research and Evidence-Based Inquiry
PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL - Ethical and Social Responsibility
PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL - Leadership and Teamwork

Intended Learning Outcomes

01. Identify major differences between faunal remains and discuss theoretical approaches to zoo archaeological analysis
02. Use archaeological materials such as bones and reference animal skeletons to compile a large database. Use statistics to compare and contrast these assemblages
03. Write a major report using Harvard referencing system and a range of journal articles
04. Submit multiple choice questions to the Peer View website that demonstrate research abilities and thoughtful responses to peer reviewers

Melbourne (Bundoora), 2020, Summer 2 , Day

Overview

Online enrolment: Yes

Maximum enrolment size: N/A

Subject Instance Co-ordinator: Richard Cosgrove

Class requirements

Laboratory ClassWeek: 4 - 5
Ten 3.00 hours laboratory class per study period on weekdays during the day from week 4 to week 5 and delivered via face-to-face.

LectureWeek: 4 - 5
Ten 1.00 hour lecture per study period on weekdays during the day from week 4 to week 5 and delivered via face-to-face.

Assessments

Assessment elementCommentsCategoryContributionHurdle%ILO*

Submit 5 PeerWise multiple choice questions

N/AN/AN/ANo15SILO4

One 1,000-word workshop presentation

N/AN/AN/ANo20SILO2

One 1-hour examination (1,000-word equivalent)

N/AN/AN/ANo25SILO1

One 3,000 field report

N/AN/AN/ANo40SILO3