âThe concept of âbreedâ is very recent and does not apply to the archaeological record,â Evin said. People have, of course, been breeding dogs for particular traits for as long as weâve had dogs, and tiny lap dogs existed even in ancient Rome. However, itâs unlikely that a Neolithic herder would have described his dog as being a distinct âbreedâ from his neighborâs hunting partner, even if they looked quite different. Which, apparently, they did. Dogs had about half of their modern diversity (at least in skull shapes and sizes) by the Neolithic. Credit: Kiona Smith Bones only tell part of the story âWe know from genetic models that domestication should have started during the late Pleistocene,â Evin told Ars. A 2021 study suggested that domestic dogs have been a separate species from wolves for more than 23,000 years. But it took a while for differences to build up. Evin and her colleagues had access to 17 canine skulls that ranged from 12,700 to 50,000 years oldâprior to the end of the ice ageâand they all looked enough like modern wolves that, as Evin put it, âfor now, we have no evidence to suggest that any of the wolf-like skulls did not belong to wolves or looked different from them.â In other words, if youâre just looking at the skull, itâs hard to tell the earliest dogs from wild wolves. We have no way to know, of course, what the living dog might have looked like. Itâs worth mentioning that Evin and her colleagues found a modern Saint Bernardâs skull that, according to their statistical analysis, looked more wolf-like than dog-like. But even if itâs not offering you a brandy keg, thereâs no mistaking a live Saint Bernard, with its droopy jowls and floppy ears, for a wolf. âSkull shape tells us a lot about function and evolutionary history, but it represents only one aspect of the animalâs appearance. This means that two dogs with very similar skulls could have looked quite different in life,â Evin told Ars. âItâs an important reminder that the archaeological...
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