Rodents have not always been mere pests annoying the humans throughout their history, they may also have been their food source, researchers said.
"Rodents are frequently excavated from older archaeological sites in Europe, but people have not examined why they are there," said Jeremy Herman, a biologist at the National Museums of Scotland in the UK.
Researchers sifted through nearly 60,000 small mammal bones collected at the Skara Brae settlement on the largest island of the Orknay archipelago in Scotland.
However, the trench in one building had a greater accumulation of vole bones than the other three trenches.
This suggests that the voles, who generally live in the fields and stay away from human homes, had been brought there deliberately by people, researchers said.
The team found burn marks on several of the bones, suggesting the animals had been roasted, 'Los Angeles Times' reported.
"The way they are burnt it is pretty clear that they were pretty much whole when they were stuck on the embers of a fire. I have not tried it myself, but I imagine they got pretty crisp on the outside," Herman said.
However, it still is clear that people were eating them, at least occasionally, researchers said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
