Ancient Bones and Modern Myths: Ninth Millennium BC Hippopotamus Hunters at Akrotiri Aetokremmos, Cyprus?

Authors

  • Shlomo Bunimovitz Tel Aviv University
  • Ran Barkai Tel Aviv University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v9i1.29929

Keywords:

Akrotiri Aetokremmos,

Abstract

Recent excavations at Akrotiri Aetokremmos, Cyprus, stirred up great excitement among students of Mediterranean Archaeology and palaeozoology, since they were presented as revealing for the first time on the island a large deposit of Pleistocene fauna - mainly pygmy hippopotamus - in association in artifactual material. It was further claimed that humans may have been responsible for the extinction of some of the endemic Cypriot fauna. A re-examination of the data from the site questions the existence of the ninth millennium BC hippopotamus hunters on Cyprus and addresses the more general issues of how archaeologists observe the archaeological record, give meaning to it, and reconstruct the human past.

Author Biographies

  • Shlomo Bunimovitz, Tel Aviv University
    Shlomo Bunimovitz is a Lecturer in the Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University. He has been involved in several field projects, notably the excavations at Shiloh and the Southern Samaria Survey (1981-1986). He now co-directs (with Zvi Lederman, Ben-Gurion University) the renewed excavations of Tel Beth-Shemesh. His current research interests are socio-cultural change in Palestine during the Bronze and Iron ages, ethnicity and material culture, immigration and acculturation processes in Palestine and Cyprus at the end of the Bronze Age.
  • Ran Barkai, Tel Aviv University
    Ran Barkai is a graduate student and teaching assistant in the prehistoric section at the Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University. He has been involved in the excavation of several Neolithic sites in Israel and is currently a senior staff member in the Nahal Zehora Pottery Neolithic Project. His research deals with the Holocene cultures of the Levant, focusing primarily on lithic technology.

Published

1996-06-01

Issue

Section

Discussion and Debate

How to Cite

Bunimovitz, S., & Barkai, R. (1996). Ancient Bones and Modern Myths: Ninth Millennium BC Hippopotamus Hunters at Akrotiri Aetokremmos, Cyprus?. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 9(1), 85-96. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v9i1.29929