Document of bibliographic reference 396751

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Beyond hinges and spires: A critical examination of archaeomalacological quantification methodologies using coral reef molluscan assemblages from Jiigurru (Lizard Island Group), northern Great Barrier Reef
Abstract
Quantification, as one of the pillars of the zooarchaeological subdiscipline, is an invaluable component of the toolkit researchers use to study past people-animal interactions. Despite being the subject of rigorous (zoo)archaeological debate, the calculation of Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI) values remains one of the main methods of quantifying the relative abundance of taxa within faunal assemblages. Choosing the appropriate quantifica?tion protocol to calculate the MNI of archaeological invertebrate assemblages can be chal?lenging due to regional taxonomic considerations and the myriad of quantification methodologies and frameworks available in the global archaeomalacological literature. In an Australian context, methodologies for quantifying coral reef molluscan assemblages have not been explicitly evaluated. Using archaeological molluscan assemblages from two midden sites (Freshwater Bay Midden and Mangrove Beach Headland Midden) on the northern Great Barrier Reef island group of Jiigurru (the Lizard Island Group), we critically examine two com?monly adopted archaeomalacological quantification methodologies: the NRE MNI and tMNI protocols. The NRE MNI methodology uses one to two non-repetitive elements (NREs) of molluscs, whilst the tMNI protocol includes a wider range of elements akin to vertebrate MNI quantification methodologies. Through a comparison of taxa abundances and statistical analyses, results show that the tMNI protocol, with some modification, is best suited for the Jiigurru assemblages. Higher MNI values and an increased assemblage diversity, evenness, and richness were recorded for the molluscan assemblages at both midden sites when the tMNI protocol was applied. This study foregrounds the importance of data transparency when reporting quantification protocols and outcomes to ensure the highest degree of data quality, replicability, and usability.
Bibliographic citation
Kneppers, M.C.; Lambrides, A.B.J.; Litster, M.; Ulm, S.; McNiven, I.J.; Harris, M.; Maclaurin, C.; Nguurruumungu Indigenous Corporation; Walmbaar Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC (2024). Beyond hinges and spires: A critical examination of archaeomalacological quantification methodologies using coral reef molluscan assemblages from Jiigurru (Lizard Island Group), northern Great Barrier Reef. Australian Archaeology 2024: 1-20. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2024.2402586
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Michael Kneppers
author
Name
Ariana Lambrides
author
Name
Mirani Litster
author
Name
Sean Ulm
author
Name
Ian McNiven
author
Name
Matthew Harris
author
Name
Cailey Maclaurin
author
author

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2024.2402586

Document metadata

date created
2024-11-14
date modified
2024-11-14