The importance of marine versus terrestrial foods in prehistoric Pacific and New Zealand diets, and the adaptation of the Polynesian diet to new enviroments, is examined through the analysis of the ratios in human bone of the stable isotopes of carbon, nitrogen and sulphur. In particular, this study seeks to obtain quantitative information which could provide answers to five main questions, relating to the subsistence focus of the early Lapita colonists in the Pacific, the significance of suger cane in the diets of early Pacific populations, the proportions of reef versus open ocean and terrestrial versus marine foods in these diets, and the identification of populations with pronounced marine or pronounced terrestrial diets. One hundred...
In archaeological dating, the greatest confidence is usually placed upon radiocarbon results of mate...
International audienceRemote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the La...
PLOS ONE Volume 8 includes an article “The First New Zealanders: Patterns of Diet and Mobility Revea...
The importance of marine versus terrestrial foods in prehistoric Pacific and New Zealand diets, and ...
Stable isotopic analyses of human and faunal bones provide a valuable means to differentiate marine ...
This thesis will explore dietary change and human movement/migration patterns of prehistoric humans ...
International audienceBoth archaeological and isotopic data document dietary changes over the first ...
<div><p>Direct evidence of the environmental impact of human colonization and subsequent human adapt...
Abstract Objectives Stable isotope ratio analysis of bulk bone collagen dominates research into past...
Direct evidence of the environmental impact of human colonization and subsequent human adaptational ...
The stable carbon (δ(13) C) and nitrogen (δ(15) N) isotope values of bone collagen are frequently us...
Tonga is a Polynesian island chain that was initially colonized by the Lapita culture about 2700 yea...
Two datasets are presented in this paper, one from archaeologically-derived human remains and one fr...
The study and reconstruction of ancient dietary habits has become a very significant topic in archae...
An extensive ecological literature applies stable isotope mixing models to derive quantitative dieta...
In archaeological dating, the greatest confidence is usually placed upon radiocarbon results of mate...
International audienceRemote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the La...
PLOS ONE Volume 8 includes an article “The First New Zealanders: Patterns of Diet and Mobility Revea...
The importance of marine versus terrestrial foods in prehistoric Pacific and New Zealand diets, and ...
Stable isotopic analyses of human and faunal bones provide a valuable means to differentiate marine ...
This thesis will explore dietary change and human movement/migration patterns of prehistoric humans ...
International audienceBoth archaeological and isotopic data document dietary changes over the first ...
<div><p>Direct evidence of the environmental impact of human colonization and subsequent human adapt...
Abstract Objectives Stable isotope ratio analysis of bulk bone collagen dominates research into past...
Direct evidence of the environmental impact of human colonization and subsequent human adaptational ...
The stable carbon (δ(13) C) and nitrogen (δ(15) N) isotope values of bone collagen are frequently us...
Tonga is a Polynesian island chain that was initially colonized by the Lapita culture about 2700 yea...
Two datasets are presented in this paper, one from archaeologically-derived human remains and one fr...
The study and reconstruction of ancient dietary habits has become a very significant topic in archae...
An extensive ecological literature applies stable isotope mixing models to derive quantitative dieta...
In archaeological dating, the greatest confidence is usually placed upon radiocarbon results of mate...
International audienceRemote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the La...
PLOS ONE Volume 8 includes an article “The First New Zealanders: Patterns of Diet and Mobility Revea...