The study of migration within the Roman Empire has been a focus of the bioarchaeological and biogeochemical research during the last decade. The possible association of diet and sex, age, and funerary treatment during the 1st-4th centuries AD have been extensively explored in Britain, and Central-Southern Italy. Conversely, no knowledge is available about these processes for the North of the Italian Peninsula. In the present work we analyse a set (N=16) of Roman inhumations from Bologna (Northern Italy, 1st-4th c. AD), some of which are characterized by unusual features (prone depositions, transfixion of the skeleton by iron nails). Analysis of strontium, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon isotopes is used to test for the possible correlation bet...
The European Late Iron Age (4th -1st centuries BCE) features intense trade networks and movements of...
This project tests the hypothesis that the Langobard migration into the Roman/Byzantine Veneto (nort...
Recent excavations at Driffield Terrace in York (Northern England) revealed an extremely unusual Rom...
The study of migration within the Roman Empire has been a focus of the bioarchaeological and biogeoc...
The study of migration within the Roman Empire has been a focus of the bioarchaeological and biogeoc...
The 4th century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Italy. Their arrival ha...
The 4th century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Italy. Their arrival ha...
<div><p>The 4<sup>th</sup> century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Ital...
Migration to Rome in the Imperial period has been under-researched owing to a dearth of epigraphical...
Little is known about the types of social organization characterizing the pre-Roman Celtic populatio...
Little is known about the types of social organization characterizing the pre-Roman Celtic populatio...
The present research investigates the relationship between dietary habits and mortality patterns in ...
This work examines the carbon and nitrogen composition of human and animal collagen from the Roman n...
The economic and political disruption following the collapse of the Roman Empire is an important mom...
The Copper Age in Italy (4000-2300 BCE) is represented mostly by funerary contexts, with many cultur...
The European Late Iron Age (4th -1st centuries BCE) features intense trade networks and movements of...
This project tests the hypothesis that the Langobard migration into the Roman/Byzantine Veneto (nort...
Recent excavations at Driffield Terrace in York (Northern England) revealed an extremely unusual Rom...
The study of migration within the Roman Empire has been a focus of the bioarchaeological and biogeoc...
The study of migration within the Roman Empire has been a focus of the bioarchaeological and biogeoc...
The 4th century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Italy. Their arrival ha...
The 4th century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Italy. Their arrival ha...
<div><p>The 4<sup>th</sup> century BC marks the main entrance of Celtic populations in northern Ital...
Migration to Rome in the Imperial period has been under-researched owing to a dearth of epigraphical...
Little is known about the types of social organization characterizing the pre-Roman Celtic populatio...
Little is known about the types of social organization characterizing the pre-Roman Celtic populatio...
The present research investigates the relationship between dietary habits and mortality patterns in ...
This work examines the carbon and nitrogen composition of human and animal collagen from the Roman n...
The economic and political disruption following the collapse of the Roman Empire is an important mom...
The Copper Age in Italy (4000-2300 BCE) is represented mostly by funerary contexts, with many cultur...
The European Late Iron Age (4th -1st centuries BCE) features intense trade networks and movements of...
This project tests the hypothesis that the Langobard migration into the Roman/Byzantine Veneto (nort...
Recent excavations at Driffield Terrace in York (Northern England) revealed an extremely unusual Rom...