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Study IDs 9,400-Year-Old Dog, Earliest Evidence Of Domestication

CLARKE CANFIELD   01/19/11 08:58 AM ET   AP

9400 Year Old Dog

PORTLAND, Maine — Nearly 10,000 years ago, man's best friend provided protection and companionship – and an occasional meal.

That's what researchers are saying after finding a bone fragment from what they are calling the earliest confirmed domesticated dog in the Americas.

University of Maine graduate student Samuel Belknap III came across the fragment while analyzing a dried-out sample of human waste unearthed in southwest Texas in the 1970s. A carbon-dating test put the age of the bone at 9,400 years, and a DNA analysis confirmed it came from a dog – not a wolf, coyote or fox, Belknap said.

Because it was found deep inside a pile of human excrement and was the characteristic orange-brown color that bone turns when it has passed through the digestive tract, the fragment provides the earliest direct evidence that dogs – besides being used for company, security and hunting – were eaten by humans and may even have been bred as a food source, he said.

Belknap wasn't researching dogs when he found the bone. Rather, he was looking into the diet and nutrition of the people who lived in the Lower Pecos region of Texas between 1,000 and 10,000 years ago.

"It just so happens this person who lived 9,400 years ago was eating dog," Belknap said.

Belknap and other researchers from the University of Maine and the University of Oklahoma's molecular anthropology laboratories, where the DNA analysis was done, have written a paper on their findings.

The paper has been scientifically reviewed and accepted, pending revisions, for publication in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology later this year, said editor in chief Christopher Ruff. He declined comment on the article until it has been published.

Dogs have played an important role in human culture for thousands of years.

There are archaeological records of dogs going back 31,000 years from a site in Belgium, 26,000 years in the Czech Republic and 15,000 years in Siberia, said Robert Wayne, a professor of evolutionary biology at UCLA and a dog evolution expert. But canine records in the New World aren't as detailed or go back nearly as far.

For his research, Belknap – who does not own a dog himself – had fecal samples shipped to him that had been unearthed in 1974 and 1975 from an archaeological site known as Hinds Cave and kept in storage at Texas A&M University. The fragment is about six-tenths of an inch long and three- to four-tenths of an inch wide, or about the size of a fingernail on a person's pinkie.

He and a fellow student identified the bone as a fragment from where the skull connects with the spine. He said it came from a dog that probably resembled the small, short-nosed, short-haired mutts that were common among the Indians of the Great Plains.

Judging by the size of the bone, Belknap figures the dog weighed about 25 to 30 pounds. He also found what he thinks was a bone from a dog foot, but the fragment was too small to be analyzed.

Other archaeological digs have put dogs in the U.S. dating back 8,000 years or more, but this is the first time it has been scientifically proved that dogs were here that far back, he said.

Darcy Morey, a faculty member at Radford University who has studied dog evolution for decades, said a study from the 1980s dated a dog found at Danger Cave, Utah, at between 9,000 and 10,000 years old. Those dates were based not on carbon-dating or DNA tests, but on an analysis of the surrounding rock layers.

"So 9,400 years old may be the oldest, but maybe not," Morey said in an e-mail.

Morey, whose 2010 book, "Dogs: Domestication and the Development of a Social Bond," traces the evolution of dogs, said he is skeptical about DNA testing on a single bone fragment because dogs and wolves are so similar genetically.

Belknap said there may well be older dogs in North America, but this is the oldest directly dated one he is aware of. For many years, researchers thought that dog bones from an archaeological site in Idaho were 11,000 years old, but additional testing put their age at between 1,000 and 3,000 years old, he said.

"If there's one thing our discovery is showing it's that we can utilize these techniques and learn a lot more about dogs in the New World if we apply these tests to all these early samples," he said.

The earliest dogs in North America are believed to have come with the early settlers across the Bering land bridge from Asia to the Americas 10,000 years ago or earlier, said Wayne, who has not seen Belknap's research.

It doesn't surprise Belknap that dogs were a source of food for humans.

A lot of people in Central America regularly ate dogs, he said. Across the Great Plains, some Indian tribes ate dogs when food was scarce or for celebrations, he said.

"It was definitely an accepted practice among many populations," he said.

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PORTLAND, Maine — Nearly 10,000 years ago, man's best friend provided protection and companionship – and an occasional meal. That's what researchers are saying after finding a bone fragme...
PORTLAND, Maine — Nearly 10,000 years ago, man's best friend provided protection and companionship – and an occasional meal. That's what researchers are saying after finding a bone fragme...
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06:38 PM on 01/23/2011
A portion of the skull or a dogs foot? According to THIS article, the researcher is saying both.
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12:03 PM on 01/23/2011
man started keeping dog i think even earlier than that, When did we domestic people?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
08:51 AM on 01/23/2011
outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend.

Inside a dog, it's too dark to read
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European1919
I am the PigmⒶn
08:43 AM on 01/23/2011
In Asia people still eat dogs today. Some consider it to be a delicacy. There is actually a breed called Chow-Chow ;-P
People always find it strange what other people eat. We are often looked at funny, because we eat cows and pigs, which others for various reasons don't. The French think horsemeat is delicious, something which is frowned upon in England.
01:17 AM on 01/23/2011
This thread is making me hungry.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
EspritDeVoltaire
K Street PR firm board member
05:11 PM on 01/22/2011
Is there any indication that the practice has stopped down there?
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
02:20 PM on 01/22/2011
Playing dead, was it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Angie Daniels
Obama-Biden 2012!
03:25 AM on 01/22/2011
Why would you eat something that helps you to hunt? I mean my dog would keep me alive in squirrels, birds and fish if the apocalypse comes tomorrow. I would not eat her if she were too old to hunt. I'm not naive enough to think that people back then were vegetarian (and in my life, I only eat things I think I'd be able to catch if we were hunter gatherer... IE seafood) but even 10,000 years ago it would seem odd for man to eat dogs. Their status as valued companion animals is pretty well documented.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:32 AM on 01/22/2011
I love my dogs so much I would let them eat me. ....that is not double entandre.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Angie Daniels
Obama-Biden 2012!
05:01 AM on 01/22/2011
Ha. No comment.
01:13 AM on 01/23/2011
I've been eaten by a few dogs in the past.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
04:07 PM on 01/22/2011
Many Native Americans used to eat dogs, such as chihuahuas, and some people still eat dog today. Many people around the world don't have the same "the dog is a family member" mentality that Americans do.
12:53 AM on 01/21/2011
9,500 years ago people ate bones?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:33 AM on 01/22/2011
They're totally off base. I read some place else that the dig was done in Michael Vick's garage.
09:20 PM on 01/20/2011
Who cares about that old dog. How much did it cost for the Govt. to analyze the remains?
People spend way to much money and effort on stupid things like this. What they need to do is find a cure for cancer and HIV/AIDS.
10:16 PM on 01/20/2011
Well, it keeps people employeed which is good. Not all of us can be bio-engineers.
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10:28 PM on 01/20/2011
how do you know that the two are not related?
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
08:51 PM on 01/20/2011
'There are archaeological records of dogs going back 31,000 years from a site in Belgium, 26,000 years in the Czech Republic and 15,000 years in Siberia, said Robert Wayne, a professor of evolutionary biology at UCLA and a dog evolution expert. But canine records in the New World aren't as detailed or go back nearly as far.'

Wow, I knew it had been a long time, but . . . the Neandertals were still around when we made friends with Rover? Wow. Now THAT is cool.

I used to wonder how dogs could possibly have gotten so good at reading our faces, and we theirs. Thirty thousand years makes me wonder a bit less.

Wow.
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kadene
wordsmith
06:16 PM on 01/20/2011
Earth is only 6,000 years old. Don't you believe it!
08:23 AM on 01/21/2011
good one!
09:56 AM on 01/21/2011
That only proves that dogs came from another planet. You have to work harder to refudiate the well known age of earth.
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inspjoe
take two go to right
11:50 AM on 01/21/2011
maybe thay came from the dog star
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
UncleJimbo
BLANK!
05:37 PM on 01/21/2011
Pluto!..........
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ontariogirl
Power to the People
11:33 AM on 01/20/2011
See I've been telling my friends those implanted chips in pets are good. That's how my friend found her cat.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
11:23 AM on 01/20/2011
Critters people have raised as food animals: swans, peacocks, guinea pigs, eels, crickets, snails, cochineal (food colouring), horses and bunny rabbits, among others.
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terry63
04:59 PM on 01/21/2011
That is a good idea.
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Dunkleberger Karl
Historian,Humanitarian,Hedonist.
08:18 AM on 01/20/2011
Forget the Pooper scooper , Get the Back hoe! and  a Pizza!