Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T11:52:40.267Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Stable isotopes and faunal bones. Comments on Milner et al. (2004)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2015

R. Barberena
Affiliation:
Dipa-Imhicihu (Conicet), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Saavedra 15, 5°, Capital Federal, Repóblica Argentina (Email: ramidus28@fibertel.com.ar)
L.A. Borrero
Affiliation:
Dipa-Imhicihu (Conicet), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Saavedra 15, 5°, Capital Federal, Repóblica Argentina (Email: dipa.imhicihu@conicet.gov.ar)

Abstract

The authors comment on ways of comparing the results of stable isotopes, on the one hand, and faunal remains, on the other, as evidence for diet

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ambrose, S.H. & Norr, L. 1993. Relationship of carbon isotope ratios of whole diet and dietary protein to those of bone collagen and carbonate, in Lambert, J. & Grupe, G. (ed.). Prehistoric human bone: archaeology at the molecular level: 138. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Bailey, G. & Milner, N. 2002. Coastal hunter-gatherers and social evolution: marginal or central? Before Farming 34 (1): 122.Google Scholar
Barberena, R., L’heureux, G. & Borrero, L.A.. 2004. Expandiendo el alcance de las reconstrucciones de subsistencia. Isótopos estables y conjuntos arqueofaunísticos. Actas de las V Jornadas de Arqueología de la Patagonia. Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Barrientos, G. 2002. The archaeological analysis of death-related behaviors from an evolutionary perspective: exploring the bioarchaeological record of early American hunter-gatherers, in Martínez, G.A. & Lanata, J.L. (ed.). Tendencias en Arqueología Evolutiva: 221–53. FCS, UNCPBA, Olavarría.Google Scholar
Borrero, L.A. 2001. Regional taphonomy: background noise and the integrity of the archaeological record, in Kuznar, L.A. (ed.). Ethnoarchaeology of Andean South America: contributions to archaeological method and theory: 243–54. Anns Arbor: International Monographs in Prehistory, Ethnoarchaeological Series 4.Google Scholar
Borrero, L.A. & Barberena, R. 2004. Hunter-gatherer home ranges and marine resources. An exploration. Ms. under consideration.Google Scholar
Byron, J. 1996. Naufragio en las costas patagónicas. Buenos Aires: Ediciones del Sol-Ediciones UNESCO.Google Scholar
Franco, N.V. & Barberena, R. 2004. Stones and isotopes: exploratory evaluation of hunter-gatherer home ranges in Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. Paper presented at the 69th meeting of the society for American archaeology Montreal, Canada.Google Scholar
Guichön, R.A., Barberena, R. & Borrero, L.A.. 2001. Dónde y cómo aparecen los restos óseos humanos en Patagonia Austral? Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia (Serie Ciencias Humanas) 29: 103–18.Google Scholar
Gusinde, M. 1982. Los indios de Tierra del Fuego. Tomo 1, Los Selk’nam. Two volumes. Buenos Aires: CAEA (Conicet).Google Scholar
Gusinde, M. 1986. Los indios de Tierra del Fuego. Tomo 2, Los Yámana. Three volumes. Buenos Aires: CAEA (Conicet).Google Scholar
Hedges, R. 2004. Isotopes and red herrings: comments on Milner et al. and Lidén et al. Antiquity 78: 347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koch, P.L., Tuross, N. & Fogel, M.L.. 1997. The effects of sample treatment and diagenesis on the isotopic integrity of carbonate in biogenic hydroxylapatite. Journal of Archaeological Science 24: 417–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krueger, H. 1991. Exchange of carbon with biological apatite. Journal of Archaeological Science 18: 355–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee-Thorp, J.A. 2000. Preservation of biogenic carbon isotopic signals in Plio-Pleistocene bone and tooth mineral, in Ambrose, S.H. & Katzenberg, M.A. (ed.). Biogeochemical Approaches to Paleodietary Analysis. Advances in Archaeological and Museum Science 5: 89111. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lidén, K., Eriksson, G. Nordqvist, B. Götherström, A. & Bendixen, E. 2004. “The wet and the wild followed by the dry and the tame” – or did they occur at the same time? Diet in Mesolithic-Neolithic southern Sweden. Antiquity 78: 2333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lubell, D., Jackes, M. Schwarcz, H. Knyf, M. & Meiklejohn, C. 1994. The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Portugal: Isotopic and dental evidence of diet. Journal of Archaeological Science 21: 201–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milner, N., Craig, O.E. Bailey, G.N. Pedersen, K. & Andersen, S.H.. 2004. Something fishy in the Neolithic? A re-evaluation of stable isotopic analysis of Mesolithic and Neolithic coastal populations. Antiquity 78: 922.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parkington, J. 2001. Mobility, seasonality and southern African hunter-gatherers. South African Archaeological Bulletin 56 (173 & 174): 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pate, F.D. 1997. Bone chemistry and paleodiet: reconstructing prehistoric subsistence-settlement systems in Australia. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 16: 103–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Politis, G.G. & Saunders, N.J.. 2002. Archaeological correlates of ideological activity: food taboos and spirit-animals in an Amazonian hunter-gatherer society, in Miracle, P. & Milner, N. (ed.). Consuming passions and patterns of consumption: 113–30. Cambridge: McDonald Institute Monographs.Google Scholar
Richards, M.P. & Hedges, R.E.M.. 1999. A Neolithic revolution? New evidence of diet in the British Neolithic. Antiquity 73: 891–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, M.P., Price, T.D. & Koch, E. 2003. Mesolithic and Neolithic subsistence in Denmark: new stable isotope data. Current Anthropology 44: 288–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tauber, H. 1981. 13C evidence for dietary habits of early man in Denmark. Nature 292: 332–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tykot, R.H., Van Der Merwe, N.J. & Hammond, N. 1996. Stable isotope analysis of bone collagen and apatite in the reconstruction of human diet: a case study from Cuello, Belize, in Orna, M.V. (ed.). Archaeological chemistry. Organic, inorganic and biochemical analysis. ACS Symposium Series 625: 355–65. Washington: American Chemical Society.CrossRefGoogle Scholar