Posted on 11/25/2004 10:50:26 AM PST by Dallas59
From the President: Talking Turkey Volume 57 Number 6, November/December 2004 by Jane C. Waldbaum
Food for thought this Thanksgiving
During the holiday season, most people's thoughts naturally turn to food. As an archaeologist, however, I am almost as interested in the origins of our feasts as I am in partaking of them. And the turkey, which may well appear on your own festive dinner table, has a fascinating archaeological and zoological past.
The turkey originated in North America. Ice Age turkey bones have been found from Florida to New Mexico. A.W. Schorger, who wrote the standard work The Wild Turkey: Its History and Domestication in 1966, suggests that turkeys were domesticated in Mexico some time between 200 B.C. and A.D. 700 and had spread through Central America and parts of South America by the time of the Spanish conquest. A second, apparently independent area of domestication is in the American Southwest around A.D. 200 in the Mogollon culture of New Mexico and A.D. 400 in the Anasazi of Arizona.
Turkeys appear in the artwork of many ancient cultures. The Maya painted or modeled turkeys--distinguished by the wattle falling down the front of the face and by bumps on the headÑon many vases from around A.D. 250 to 800, notes University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee art historian Andrea Stone. "For the Maya," she adds, "turkeys were quintessential animals for feasting and for sacrificial offerings." They even made turkey-shaped tamales! And in the Southwest, the birds appear as painted designs on Mimbres pottery a thousand years ago.
The Spanish conquistadors, including Cortés (1519), were greeted by the local people with plenty of turkey and other delicacies. Ambassadors from the Aztec ruler Montezuma are said to have presented Cortés with six golden turkeys (no doubt soon melted down!). The Spanish must have liked what they tasted, because they shipped turkeys back to Spain as early as 1511. From there the turkey spread rapidly through western Europe and, in a delicious twist, English, French, and Dutch colonists brought this bird back to eastern North America in the early seventeenth century, where it interbred with wild turkeys to become the ancestor of the modern holiday gobbler. The Pilgrims, who, according to the apocryphal story, ate wild turkey at the first Thanksgiving, would likely have been familiar with the domestic variety before leaving Europe.
Jean Hudson, a zooarchaeologist at UW-Milwaukee, says she studies animal remains "to better understand past human behaviors and beliefs." As she sees it, the story of the peripatetic turkey is a wonderful example of "how complex the relationship between humans and animals can be." As we sit down to our holiday feasts, let us remember the remarkable story of what Ben Franklin described, in a letter to his daughter, as a "respectable Bird, and withal a true original Native of America." Pass the drumstick!
"History"
Ben Franklin wanted the turkey to be our national symbol.
The wild turkey I would have had no problem with but I must admit the eagle looks nicer. (and meaner, always a good thing)
Yup, but he liked the wild turkey, an extremely smart and wily creature.
"Domesticated" turkeys are dumb as a dodo.
I read that there is a big movement now to save and reintroduce the "Heritage Turkeys" to the public. The Narragansett seems to be the closest breed to the wild type, and was the one presented to president Lincoln. There is a regular-looking type, the Bronze, which does breed naturally, and also flies. The broad-breasted types, bronze and white, would disappear without artificial insemination. I just read that Heritage types sell for $3 to $7 a pound, so there is commercial incentive to breed them, and they are said to be delicious, with more dark meat too. The Bourbon (county) Red is said to be the most delicious.
Now I'm really getting hungry.
"The wild turkey I would have had no problem with but I must admit the eagle looks nicer. (and meaner, always a good thing)"
Speaking of which, and your screen name...Theodore Roosevelt (a Muttly Hero) wanted the Grizzly Bear as our symbol...because the rest of the world "may not ever like us, but at least they'll fear us."
:kicks terrorist head behind couch:
But we are sweet kind and loving. Pay no attention to the banging coming from the cellar. It is just the plumbing.
...or it may be Mr. Spinoza.
...or some of the other Yellow Fever victims in the basement.
Ping
That variety looks like a fat vulture. I saw some wild turkeys in the St. Louis suburbs that are much prettier.
I knew you were a thoughtful and sensitive person.
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