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ough there is no direct parallel to the dugong mound, Neolithic burials with turtle remains have been noted in Oman at Ras Al Hamra (dated to 3,700-3,300 BCE). Structured dugong bone mounds have been found in totemic sites in Australia on the coast of the Torres Strait: these, however, date to between the 14th and 20th Centuries. The wider site at Akab shows occupation throughout the fifth millennium, from 4,750-3,814 BCE, while signs of occupation in the fourth millennium, apart from the bone mound, are scant. Evidence of occupation patterns at Akab point to seasonality and also the possibility of fish processing (salting or smoking). Both net weights and bone hooks were found at the site, as well as evidence of settlement and bones from a wide range of coastal and deeper water species. Lifestyles Although the Neolithic is generally associated with stable settlement and husbandry, the Neolithic in the United Arab Emirates appears to have been characterised by a mix of settled and nomadic and/or semi-nomadic lifestyles, a pattern which persists until the modern era. Coastal occupation in the winter and pastoralism and horticulture in the interior would have been common throughout. The domestication of sheep, cattle and goats is evidenced from 5,000 BCE onwards, with evidence of extensive consumption of fish (including dugong and turtle) and the use of stone sinkers at Gagha pointing to the use of small nets as early as 6,500 BCE. The late Neolithic also was a time of regional trade and the emer