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Subject:
From:
"Lyle E. Browning" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 31 Aug 2007 15:24:32 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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text/plain (91 lines)
Rodents in cars will eat lots of different items. The rubberized  
covering on wires may well contain ingredients that give it  
bendability or other characteristics. Lead springs to mind, which is  
sweet to the taste and probably to their liking. A neighbor had one  
of those Husky dogs that chewed through the gas lines in their Jeep  
in the garage. Basically, there's no accounting for taste when it  
comes to what animals will chew. Texture may have a lot to do with  
what is chewed, as does the overall taste. Those are weird dynamics.  
People do love limburger cheese which smells like nothing I'd want to  
eat. People also eat Brussels sprouts willingly, and liver. Beyond  
the pale for me, but who knows?

Lyle Browning


On Aug 31, 2007, at 2:29 PM, Carol Serr wrote:

> Well, I knew rodents Needed to keep there teeth "worn down" by
> gnawing...but it puzzled me that they gnawed on small bone  
> buttons...yet
> I didn't see any snawing on the larger mammal bone remains...or shoe
> leather (not hard enough?)....or other hard rubber items...  Why so  
> few
> items show gnawing? (at least in the few collections I have seen it  
> in).
> Obviously we wouldn't see the evidence if they gnaw on rocks (or
> metal?).  But why do marmots single out car wires?  Why not the  
> bumpers?
> Tires? Battery? Hoses?  Or does this all mean they target 'small' size
> things...since they have small mouths?  But...marmots aint so small.
>
> Showing my ignorance again...
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
>> Behalf Of Timothy Scarlett
>> Sent: Friday, August 31, 2007 6:39 AM
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: avian bones get eaten...gnaw marks on artifacts
>>
>>> - - -
>>> Has anyone else seen tiny gnaw marks on bone buttons, handles
>>> (toothbrushes) and such...from rodents?  I wonder how common
>> this is,
>>> in dumped refuse?
>>>
>>> Also noticed this on hard rubber 'irrigators' (douche and
>> enema tubes)
>>> from a privy.  The bone, I can see the critters wanting calcium, or
>>> something...but rubber??
>>
>>
>> This is extraordinarily common.  All members of Rodentia, as
>> well as the Lagomorphs (bunnies, hares, rabbits),
>> instinctively gnaw on almost anything.  It does not have to be
>> food.  They must gnaw to keep their teeth sharp and the correct size.
>>
>> "Despite their morphological and ecological diversity, all
>> rodents share one characteristic: their dentition is highly
>> specialized for gnawing. All rodents have a single pair of
>> upper and a single pair of lower incisors, followed by a gap (
>> diastema), followed by one or more molars or premolars. No
>> rodent has more than one incisor in each quadrant, and no
>> rodent has canines. Rodent incisors are rootless, growing
>> continuously. Their anterior and lateral surfaces are covered
>> with enamel, but their posterior surface is not. During
>> gnawing, as the incisors grind against each other, they wear
>> away the softer dentine, leaving the enamel edge as the blade
>> of a chisel. This "self sharpening" system is very effective
>> and is one of the keys to the enormous success of rodents."
>>
>> If I didn't see gnaw marks at all on a site, I would have a
>> soil sample checked for toxicity.
>> Cheers,
>> Tim
>>
>> Quote from:
>> http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/
>> Rodentia.html
>>
>>
>> Timothy Scarlett
>> Assistant Professor of Archaeology
>> Department of Social Sciences
>> Michigan Technological University
>> [log in to unmask]
>> (906)487-2359 (office)
>> (906)487-2468 (fax)
>> ------------------------
>>

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