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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Isotopic Anthropology of Rural German Medieval Diet: Intra- and Inter-population Variability

Frank J RühliKaryn C. OlsenDomingo C. Salazar-garcíaChristine D. WhiteFred J. LongstaffeChristina Warinner

subject

010506 paleontologyArcheologyArqueologia medievalPopulationFood consumption610 Medicine & healthBiological and Physical AnthropologyBiologyTerrestrial animalPlant foods01 natural sciences0601 history and archaeologySkeletal materialeducationmedieval Germany0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTrophic leveleducation.field_of_studyBone collagen060102 archaeologyEcologyisotopic modelling06 humanities and the artspaleodietbiology.organism_classificationPopulation variabilityArchaeologyAnthropology11294 Institute of Evolutionary Medicine3314 Anthropology3302 Archeologycarbon and nitrogen isotopes1204 Archeology (arts and humanities)Archaeological Anthropology

description

This study investigates the diet of an eleventh century CE parish community located in northwestern Germany. We assessed the isotopic compositions of human (n = 24) and faunal (n = 17) bone collagen (δ 13Ccol, δ 15Ncol) and human structural carbonate (δ 13Csc) using skeletal material recovered from the Dalheim cemetery. Traditional interpretation of the isotopic data indicates that Dalheim residents likely relied on a C3 plant-based diet and consumed some terrestrial animal products without evidence of marine resource input in the diet. Bivariate and multivariate models used as an additional means to assess diet indicate minor consumption of C4 plant foods in this community. The multivariate-isotope model identified regional similarities and differences in C4 plant/marine food consumption and in dietary protein sources by comparing data from Dalheim with those of other medieval sites from the published literature. We did not observe sex differences in this population but differences in δ 15Ncol suggest that juveniles consumed the lowest trophic level protein.

10.1007/s12520-016-0432-yhttps://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/earthpub/article/1018/viewcontent/Olsen__K._et_al__Oct_2016_.pdf