The implications of new evidence are presented for the generally high level of marine diet in the coastal Mesolithic populations of Wales. Within these generally high levels, some variations may point to seasonal movement. These data provide a strong contrast with the mainland terrestrial diet of early Neolithic populations in the same area
Human palaeo-dietary investigations using stable isotope analysis is a well-established technique in...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
Multiple isotopic systems (C, N, O, S, Sr, Pb) are applied to investigate diet and mobility amongst ...
Stable isotope analysis has provided crucial new insights into dietary change at the Neolithic trans...
The first human stable isotope results from the Spanish Levant, from the Mesolithic (ca. 7500 BP, Me...
There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due ...
The North Sea bed host remains of Pleistocene and Early Holocene landscapes that were, mostly gradua...
The North Sea bed host remains of Pleistocene and Early Holocene landscapes that were, mostly gradua...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
The wider research project investigating the Mesolithic of the Western Isles of Scotland (the ‘Oute...
This article presents new values for the Scottish marine radiocarbon reservoir effect (MRE) during t...
Stable isotope analysis has startled the archaeological community by showing a rapid and widespread ...
In the last decade, our knowledge of the transition from foraging, fishing, and hunting to agricultu...
In 2007, excavations at the late Mesolithic (Ertebølle) coastal site of Asnæs Havnemark recovered a ...
The Mesolithic period in the Cantabrian region, a coastal area located in northern Spain, is charact...
Human palaeo-dietary investigations using stable isotope analysis is a well-established technique in...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
Multiple isotopic systems (C, N, O, S, Sr, Pb) are applied to investigate diet and mobility amongst ...
Stable isotope analysis has provided crucial new insights into dietary change at the Neolithic trans...
The first human stable isotope results from the Spanish Levant, from the Mesolithic (ca. 7500 BP, Me...
There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due ...
The North Sea bed host remains of Pleistocene and Early Holocene landscapes that were, mostly gradua...
The North Sea bed host remains of Pleistocene and Early Holocene landscapes that were, mostly gradua...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
The wider research project investigating the Mesolithic of the Western Isles of Scotland (the ‘Oute...
This article presents new values for the Scottish marine radiocarbon reservoir effect (MRE) during t...
Stable isotope analysis has startled the archaeological community by showing a rapid and widespread ...
In the last decade, our knowledge of the transition from foraging, fishing, and hunting to agricultu...
In 2007, excavations at the late Mesolithic (Ertebølle) coastal site of Asnæs Havnemark recovered a ...
The Mesolithic period in the Cantabrian region, a coastal area located in northern Spain, is charact...
Human palaeo-dietary investigations using stable isotope analysis is a well-established technique in...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
Multiple isotopic systems (C, N, O, S, Sr, Pb) are applied to investigate diet and mobility amongst ...