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Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2 |
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and its influences, the substantia compacta of the bones in all ruminants loses
in hardness and weight, making the spongiosa more prominent. A further proof
exists in the deep furrowing and roughness of the exterior of the cores, which is
always an evidence of adult age.
In ascending through the culture-strata the horn-cores of the sheep become
smaller and more slender and, in the larger forms, almost two-edged in cross-
section. The conclusion is easy to draw that we have here the successive remains
of the domesticated wild sheep, gradually altered in character through the process
of domestication, which began with the taming of the ancestral form represented
in the lower culture-strata.
Ovis aries palustris Rütimeyer. (See plate 75, fig. 2; plate 76, figs. 5-7; plate 83, fig. 2.)
The sheep represented in the fully preserved calvarium (No. 21) from +23
feet in the æneolithic culture-strata I b is, according to all the characteristics
of the horn-cores, which are two-edged along almost their whole length, an Ovis
aries palustris, a "turbary sheep" of Rütimeyer, in a form which closely resembles
those found by Studer* and by Glur† in the Swiss lake-dwellings of Lake Bienne.
It is a form with a little larger horn than those of this breed still living in Wales
and Iceland and in small numbers in the mountains of the Grisons. But is it
possible that a tame turbary sheep (Torfschaf) can have originated from a wild
Ovis vignei arkal Lydekker?
In a former memoir Gaillard and I‡ undertook to show that C. Keller§ was
wrong in his view that the turbary sheep was derived from the African Barbary
sheep (Ammotragus tragelaphus). We reached the conclusion, then, that Ovis
vignei must have been the ancestral form of the turbary sheep, and although we
had at that time no direct proof to offer, it must be the case on account of the
horns, which present the distinguishing, if not the only, characteristic of the
turbary sheep.
The horns of the Barbary sheep develop, according to my investigations
on more than twenty heads of young lambs of Ammotragus tragelaphus, in round
and cone-shaped structures which retain the conical form till late old age. In the
turbary sheep (at least that which C. Keller considers to be the so-called Nalpser-
schaf, from the Alp-Nalps in Canton Grisons) the young horn is pressed wholly
flat and scabbard-like. I have confirmed this on individuals which C. Keller himself
bought for the zoological park of Zürich, and which later came to me by purchase
and are now in my experimental flock, where they are being studied with reference
to the question of their derivation. Further, this peculiarity is clearly recog-
nizable in the English turbary sheep of Wales and the Hebrides.
Now, the lamb and the female of Ovis vignei show the same form of horn-
sheath, as will be seen in the picture; but since my researches on the origin and
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