From Neolithic Malta, there is evidence of increasing population size accompanied by increasingly elaborate material culture, including the famous megalithic architecture. Stoddart et al. (1993) argued that social tensions and controls increased as food resources diminished. One important requirement of this argument is that the Neolithic inhabitants of Malta depended entirely on domesticated plants and animals for subsistence and therefore, with increased population sizes, the poor agricultural potential of these islands was stretched. However, it is possible that the consumption of wild foods, particularly marine resources, in the Neolithic would make up any shortfall in the agricultural foods. A direct way of measuring the amounts of mar...
International audienceObjectives: A clear understanding of past weaning practices can provide invalu...
Hunter-gatherers living in Europe during the transition from the late Pleistocene to the Holocene in...
We report here new evidence for human subsistence from stable isotope analysis of humans and fauna f...
The study of the proportions of stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen which survive in ancient huma...
International audienceObjectives: The aims of this research are to explore the diet, mobility, socia...
For the last ten millennia humans have learned how to manage and produce their own food resources. I...
The introduction of domesticated plants and animals into Britain during the Neolithic cultural perio...
The aim of this communication is to characterize the individual and then the group diet of first Neo...
In this study, human remains from the Neolithic stalled cairn of the Knowe of Rowiegar, Rousay, Orkn...
At the end of the 7th millennium BC, social and economic changes occurred in the Northwestern Medite...
The Neolithic period is archaeologically well documented in Central Europe, and several studies cons...
In this study, the subsistence patterns of two prehistoric communities on the island of Euboea were ...
Carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) have made a huge contribution to understanding d...
Stable isotope analysis has startled the archaeological community by showing a rapid and widespread ...
We report here on direct evidence for the intensive consumption of marine foods by anatomically mode...
International audienceObjectives: A clear understanding of past weaning practices can provide invalu...
Hunter-gatherers living in Europe during the transition from the late Pleistocene to the Holocene in...
We report here new evidence for human subsistence from stable isotope analysis of humans and fauna f...
The study of the proportions of stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen which survive in ancient huma...
International audienceObjectives: The aims of this research are to explore the diet, mobility, socia...
For the last ten millennia humans have learned how to manage and produce their own food resources. I...
The introduction of domesticated plants and animals into Britain during the Neolithic cultural perio...
The aim of this communication is to characterize the individual and then the group diet of first Neo...
In this study, human remains from the Neolithic stalled cairn of the Knowe of Rowiegar, Rousay, Orkn...
At the end of the 7th millennium BC, social and economic changes occurred in the Northwestern Medite...
The Neolithic period is archaeologically well documented in Central Europe, and several studies cons...
In this study, the subsistence patterns of two prehistoric communities on the island of Euboea were ...
Carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) have made a huge contribution to understanding d...
Stable isotope analysis has startled the archaeological community by showing a rapid and widespread ...
We report here on direct evidence for the intensive consumption of marine foods by anatomically mode...
International audienceObjectives: A clear understanding of past weaning practices can provide invalu...
Hunter-gatherers living in Europe during the transition from the late Pleistocene to the Holocene in...
We report here new evidence for human subsistence from stable isotope analysis of humans and fauna f...