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Meat in the Palæoboreanic Diet

Copyright © 1999-2023 C.E. by D. Jon Scott



Introduction

From “Eve of an Earlier Dawn”:

Partial fossil skeletons of butchered animals have been discovered in association with Palæoboreanic settlements, including aurochsen, buffalo, wisents, muskoxen, mouflon/musmon, argali, antelope, goats, ibexes, aoudads, Pyrenean chamois, gazelles, Cretan deer, red deer (“elk” in North America), elk (“moose” in North America), giant deer (“Irish elk”), reindeer (“caribou”), okapis, wild boar, mammoths, dwarf elephants, narrow-nosed rhinoceroses, giant unicorns, tarpans, hippopotamuses, dwarf hippopotamuses, European hippopotamuses, macaques, sea cows, walruses, European giant beavers, crocodiles, giant swans, beluga sturgeon, grey mullets, surmullets, codfish, European congers, Mediterranean morays, halibuts, anchovies, mackerels, sardines, herring, carp, wels catfish, and Deninger s cave bear (Hardy & Fischer 2003), some of which so foreign in nativity as to be thought by their very presence indicative of extensive trade networks (Tiller & Wright 2003).

Note that a lot of these images are not my artwork; they are public domain illustrations that I tracked down to save myself the time of having to draw a ton of animals. I will replace these with original artwork at a later time.




Red Meats

Red meats were mostly consumed by countryfolk in sparsely-populated venues. Larger, urbanized settlements got most of their red meat imported in preserved form from the country. This is because the raising of animals to be used as food was an uncommon practice.

For more information, see Red Meat in the Palæoboreanic Diet.




Beef
This included the meat of bovines and/or other heavy bovids: aurochsen, buffalo, and wisents.



Mutton
This included the meat of caprines and/or other light bovids: sheep, goat, antelope, gazelles, and similar creatures.



Venison
This included the meat of cervids: elk and deer.



Pork
This included the meat of suiformes: boars and hogs.



Wetpork
This included the meat of whippomorphs (cetancodonts): hippopotamuses, whales, and dolphins.



Cheval
This included the meat of perissodactyls: tarpans (horses) and rhinoceroses.



Oliphance
This included the meat of probiscideans: elephants and mammoths.



[Image coming soon]
Other
This included red meats that were difficult to fit into the above categories.



White Meat

This included basically all meats derived from sources other than large mammals (i.e., all non-red meats).

For more information, see White Meat in the Palæoboreanic Diet.




Rongeur / Ronjure
This included the meat of rodents and lagomorphs: beavers, rats, hares, jerboa, and the like.



Poultry
This included the meat of birds and other diapsid reptiles such as lizards, snakes, turtles, and crocodiles.



[Image coming soon]
Poisson
This included the meat of non-amniotic vertebrates: “fishes and amphibians”



[Image coming soon]
Other
This included all the other white meats, especially that of protostomes such as arthropods and mollusks.



Animals in the Palæoboreanic Diet
⚑ Meat in the Borean Diet
Eggs in the Borean Diet
Dairy in the Borean Diet
Honey in the Borean Diet
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Palæoboreanic Diet
Animals in the Borean Diet
Fungi in the Borean Diet
Plants in the Borean Diet
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Palæoboreanic Diet
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Food-Getting Strategies
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