Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia)

2019
Authors
Stefanović, Sofija
Petrović, Bojan
Porčić, Marko

Penezić, Kristina
Pendić, Jugoslav
Dimitrijević, Vesna

Živaljević, Ivana

Vuković, Sonja

Jovanović, Jelena

Kojić, Sanja

Starović, Andrej
Blagojević, Tamara
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Around 8000 years ago, throughout the Neolithic world a new type of artefact appeared, small spoons masterly made from cattle bone, usually interpreted as tools, due to their intensive traces of use. Contrary to those interpretations, the small dimensions of spoons and presence of intensive traces of use led us to the assumption that they were used for feeding babies. In order to test that assumption we compared 2230 marks on three spoons from the Neolithic site of Grad-Starcevo in Serbia (5800-5450 cal BC) with 3151 primary teeth marks produced experimentally. This study has shown that some of the marks on spoons were made by primary teeth, which indicate their usage in feeding babies. The production of a new type of artefact to feed babies is probably related to the appearance of a new type of weaning food, and the abundance of spoons indicates that new baby gruels became an important innovation in prehistoric baby-care.
Source:
PLoS One, 2019, 14, 12Publisher:
- Public Library Science, San Francisco
Funding / projects:
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225713
ISSN: 1932-6203
PubMed: 31856238
WoS: 000534249400014
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85076992418
Institution/Community
Arheologija / ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Stefanović, Sofija AU - Petrović, Bojan AU - Porčić, Marko AU - Penezić, Kristina AU - Pendić, Jugoslav AU - Dimitrijević, Vesna AU - Živaljević, Ivana AU - Vuković, Sonja AU - Jovanović, Jelena AU - Kojić, Sanja AU - Starović, Andrej AU - Blagojević, Tamara PY - 2019 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2916 AB - Around 8000 years ago, throughout the Neolithic world a new type of artefact appeared, small spoons masterly made from cattle bone, usually interpreted as tools, due to their intensive traces of use. Contrary to those interpretations, the small dimensions of spoons and presence of intensive traces of use led us to the assumption that they were used for feeding babies. In order to test that assumption we compared 2230 marks on three spoons from the Neolithic site of Grad-Starcevo in Serbia (5800-5450 cal BC) with 3151 primary teeth marks produced experimentally. This study has shown that some of the marks on spoons were made by primary teeth, which indicate their usage in feeding babies. The production of a new type of artefact to feed babies is probably related to the appearance of a new type of weaning food, and the abundance of spoons indicates that new baby gruels became an important innovation in prehistoric baby-care. PB - Public Library Science, San Francisco T2 - PLoS One T1 - Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia) IS - 12 VL - 14 DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0225713 ER -
@article{ author = "Stefanović, Sofija and Petrović, Bojan and Porčić, Marko and Penezić, Kristina and Pendić, Jugoslav and Dimitrijević, Vesna and Živaljević, Ivana and Vuković, Sonja and Jovanović, Jelena and Kojić, Sanja and Starović, Andrej and Blagojević, Tamara", year = "2019", abstract = "Around 8000 years ago, throughout the Neolithic world a new type of artefact appeared, small spoons masterly made from cattle bone, usually interpreted as tools, due to their intensive traces of use. Contrary to those interpretations, the small dimensions of spoons and presence of intensive traces of use led us to the assumption that they were used for feeding babies. In order to test that assumption we compared 2230 marks on three spoons from the Neolithic site of Grad-Starcevo in Serbia (5800-5450 cal BC) with 3151 primary teeth marks produced experimentally. This study has shown that some of the marks on spoons were made by primary teeth, which indicate their usage in feeding babies. The production of a new type of artefact to feed babies is probably related to the appearance of a new type of weaning food, and the abundance of spoons indicates that new baby gruels became an important innovation in prehistoric baby-care.", publisher = "Public Library Science, San Francisco", journal = "PLoS One", title = "Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia)", number = "12", volume = "14", doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0225713" }
Stefanović, S., Petrović, B., Porčić, M., Penezić, K., Pendić, J., Dimitrijević, V., Živaljević, I., Vuković, S., Jovanović, J., Kojić, S., Starović, A.,& Blagojević, T.. (2019). Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia). in PLoS One Public Library Science, San Francisco., 14(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225713
Stefanović S, Petrović B, Porčić M, Penezić K, Pendić J, Dimitrijević V, Živaljević I, Vuković S, Jovanović J, Kojić S, Starović A, Blagojević T. Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia). in PLoS One. 2019;14(12). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0225713 .
Stefanović, Sofija, Petrović, Bojan, Porčić, Marko, Penezić, Kristina, Pendić, Jugoslav, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Živaljević, Ivana, Vuković, Sonja, Jovanović, Jelena, Kojić, Sanja, Starović, Andrej, Blagojević, Tamara, "Bone spoons for prehistoric babies: Detection of human teeth marks on the Neolithic artefacts from the site Grad-Starcevo (Serbia)" in PLoS One, 14, no. 12 (2019), https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225713 . .