W. Van Neer, A. Ervynck, L. Bolle, and R. Millner (2004)
Seasonality only works in certain parts of the year: The reconstruction of fishing seasons through otolith analysis
International journal of osteoarchaeology, 14:457-474.
Seasonality estimations using incremental data usually suffer from small sample sizes and
from the lack of comparison with sufficiently large modern samples. The present contribution
reports on incremental studies carried out on large assemblages of plaice (Pleuronectes
platessa) and haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) from a late medieval fishing village
(Raversijde, Belgium) on the North Sea coast. In an attempt to refine previous seasonality
estimates made for this site, and to expand conclusions concerning general methodology,
extensive monthly samples of modern otoliths of these species, caught within the North Sea,
have also been investigated. The modern material shows that the timing of the seasonal
changes in the edge type (hyaline or opaque) of the otoliths is extremely variable and that it is
dependent on the fishing ground, the year considered, and the age of the fish. It also appears
that the increase of the marginal increment thickness is highly variable, to such an extent that
the thickness of the last increment of a single otolith is mostly useless for seasonality
estimation. Where large archaeological otolith assemblages can be studied, preferably
from single depositional events, seasonality determination becomes possible on the condition,
however, that the archaeological assemblage corresponds to fish that were captured
during their period of fast growth. The growth ring study on the otoliths from Raversijde shows
that plaice fishing took place in spring and that it was preceded by a haddock fishing season,
probably in late winter/early spring.
Peer Review, Impact Factor, International Redaction Board, RBINS Collection(s)
IF 2011 = 0,955
- DOI: 10.1002/oa.727
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