"Mice were popular dish in Stone Age'



Mice were probably a popular dish in the Stone Age, according to a new study.
In an excavation of a five thousand year old settlement on the Orkney Islands in Scotland they have found large numbers of mouse bones. Burn marks on the bones indicate that the animals are roasted.
That report Scottish researchers in the scientific journal Royal Society Open Science.
The excavated settlement in Orkney existed ever eight stone houses. In total, archaeologists found more than a kilogram of mouse bones around the houses.
Many of the bones were from mice, a species that naturally stays away from people. According to lead researcher Jeremy Herman the mice are therefore presumably captured to serve as a meal.
The burn marks on the bones reveal how the rodents were prepared. "From the way they have been burned, you can deduce that the mice in their entirety were roasted in the coals of a fire"  Herman declares that in news PhysOrg. "I've never tried it myself, but probably there arose a crispy layer around the meat."
Herman suspects that mice in the Stone Age where served as food in more places in Europe. "The animals are often found during excavations of ancient settlements, but usually does not examine why they are near the houses."
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