Ancient China is one of the most important regions for the development of agriculture in human history, contributing the two key crops millet and rice. Meanwhile, it was closely connected to the wider Eurasian network, receiving wheat and barley from the West. Because of the large isotopic differences between C3 and C4 crops, we are able to track their changing importance in different regions of China and underlying connections to their cultural and environmental contexts. We take a ‘big data’ approach, assembling the stable isotopic measurements on over 2000 ancient human bones. This is the first comprehensive meta-analysis of ancient Chinese human stable carbon and nitrogen isotope results and creates a more efficient tool for scholars to...
Populations in Mongolia from the late second millennium B.C.E. through the Mongol Empire are traditi...
understanding ancient cultures. ANSTO scientists have analysed archaeological remains up to 4000 yea...
This pilot study attempts to document the potential of Prehistoric human bone and teeth collagen fro...
Prior to the introduction of wheat and barley from Central Asia during the Neolithic period, norther...
Intercontinental exchanges between communities living in different parts of Eurasia during the late ...
Here we report the bone collagen carbon and nitrogen isotopic results of humans (n = 33) and animals...
Prior to the introduction of wheat and barley from Central Asia during the Neolithic period, norther...
Human diets rely on natural resource availability and can reflect social and cultural values. When e...
The first farmers of the Wei River valley belonged to the Laoguantai period (ca. 8500-7000 yr BP) an...
Dietary patterns at two Bronze Age sites in the Hexi Corridor are investigated by the analysis of st...
Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values are presented for faunal and human bone collagen from Baij...
The Shang Dynasty (ca 1600 – 1046 BC) is considered one of the earliest state-societies in the world...
Abstract: The movements of ancient crop and animal domesticates across prehistoric Eurasia are well-...
We conducted a meta-analysis of published carbon and nitrogen isotope data from archaeological human...
Stable isotope biochemistry (δ 13C and δ 15N) and radiocarbon dating of ancient human and animal bon...
Populations in Mongolia from the late second millennium B.C.E. through the Mongol Empire are traditi...
understanding ancient cultures. ANSTO scientists have analysed archaeological remains up to 4000 yea...
This pilot study attempts to document the potential of Prehistoric human bone and teeth collagen fro...
Prior to the introduction of wheat and barley from Central Asia during the Neolithic period, norther...
Intercontinental exchanges between communities living in different parts of Eurasia during the late ...
Here we report the bone collagen carbon and nitrogen isotopic results of humans (n = 33) and animals...
Prior to the introduction of wheat and barley from Central Asia during the Neolithic period, norther...
Human diets rely on natural resource availability and can reflect social and cultural values. When e...
The first farmers of the Wei River valley belonged to the Laoguantai period (ca. 8500-7000 yr BP) an...
Dietary patterns at two Bronze Age sites in the Hexi Corridor are investigated by the analysis of st...
Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values are presented for faunal and human bone collagen from Baij...
The Shang Dynasty (ca 1600 – 1046 BC) is considered one of the earliest state-societies in the world...
Abstract: The movements of ancient crop and animal domesticates across prehistoric Eurasia are well-...
We conducted a meta-analysis of published carbon and nitrogen isotope data from archaeological human...
Stable isotope biochemistry (δ 13C and δ 15N) and radiocarbon dating of ancient human and animal bon...
Populations in Mongolia from the late second millennium B.C.E. through the Mongol Empire are traditi...
understanding ancient cultures. ANSTO scientists have analysed archaeological remains up to 4000 yea...
This pilot study attempts to document the potential of Prehistoric human bone and teeth collagen fro...