TY - JOUR
T1 - Weasels (Mustela nivalis) from the Hellenistic well at Shaar-Ha'amaqim
AU - Bar-Oz, G.
AU - Segal, A.
AU - Dayan, T.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Three complete skulls and a humerus bone of Mustela nivalis were found in an underground water cistern deposit of the Roman-Hellenistic castle at Shaar-Ha'amaqim (250-150 BCE). These new finds indicate that M. nivalis survived in Israel at least until the second century BCE. The weasel does not exist in Israel at present, and the disjunct Egyptian population is generally considered a post-glacial relict of the Pleistocene Mediterranean population. Previous fossil finds of weasels from Israel were related to the Natufian (ca. 9,000 BCE), Chalcolithic (ca. 4,000-3,300 BCE), Early Bronze (ca. 3,000 BCE), and Iron Age (ca. 1,200 BCE) cultures. Cranial measurements of the Shaar-Ha'amaqim specimens suggest that their size (40.4 ± 2.3 mm; n = 3) were within the range found in weasels of the Nile Delta (Mustela nivalis subpalmata). Weasels are characterized by extreme sexual size dimorphism and the specimens from Shaar-Ha'amaqim fall within the range size of recent females from Egypt. Thus, these fossil specimens may either be females of a large race or indicative of a later temporal size decrease in the local Israeli population.
AB - Three complete skulls and a humerus bone of Mustela nivalis were found in an underground water cistern deposit of the Roman-Hellenistic castle at Shaar-Ha'amaqim (250-150 BCE). These new finds indicate that M. nivalis survived in Israel at least until the second century BCE. The weasel does not exist in Israel at present, and the disjunct Egyptian population is generally considered a post-glacial relict of the Pleistocene Mediterranean population. Previous fossil finds of weasels from Israel were related to the Natufian (ca. 9,000 BCE), Chalcolithic (ca. 4,000-3,300 BCE), Early Bronze (ca. 3,000 BCE), and Iron Age (ca. 1,200 BCE) cultures. Cranial measurements of the Shaar-Ha'amaqim specimens suggest that their size (40.4 ± 2.3 mm; n = 3) were within the range found in weasels of the Nile Delta (Mustela nivalis subpalmata). Weasels are characterized by extreme sexual size dimorphism and the specimens from Shaar-Ha'amaqim fall within the range size of recent females from Egypt. Thus, these fossil specimens may either be females of a large race or indicative of a later temporal size decrease in the local Israeli population.
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AN - SCOPUS:33845763511
SN - 0021-2210
VL - 46
SP - 157
JO - Israel Journal of Zoology
JF - Israel Journal of Zoology
IS - 2
ER -