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Feasting at Marj Rabba, An Early Chalcolithic Site in the Galilee
29
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
Summary FeastingHistorical ArchaeologyBioarchaeologyMarj RabbaCattle FeastsArchaeological RecordEarly Chalcolithic SiteEducationArchaeologyFoodwaysAnthropologyCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesSocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyArchaeological Evidence
Summary Feasting is a common part of human culture in the present and past that can serve a variety of roles such as creating and maintaining social identities within and between social groups. In zooarchaeology, feasting evidence, rather than the accumulated and mixed refuse from long‐term consumption, often gives us some of the only data from individual events at a site. A cattle bone refuse pit at the site of Marj Rabba, Israel, provides evidence for feasting from the early Chalcolithic (c.4500–3600 BC) in the southern Levant. The presence of cattle feasts at Marj Rabba provides a glimpse of cultural practices in this critical transitional period that may mirror practices from earlier periods.
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