Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine-Meuse Delta in the Netherlands, is a key site for addressing the nature of Neolithic subsistence in the wetlands of northwestern Europe. A preliminary zooarchaeological study suggested that cattle husbandry was a major activity at Schipluiden. In contrast, stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of human remains from the site indicated a marine-oriented diet, implying that the Mesolithic-Neolithic dietary transition continued well into the mid-4th Millennium BC in this region. Here, we re-investigate the role and nature of cattle husbandry at Neolithic Schipluiden using mortality profiles and stable isotope analysis (δ18O, δ13C, δ15N) of animal bone co...
Cattle were of great importance for the Neolithic farmers of southeastern Europe, in particular as f...
YesBioarchaeological evidence suggests that the site of Grimes Graves, Norfolk, characterised by the...
YesThe Early Bronze Age barrows at Irthlingborough and Gayhurst in central England are notable for t...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine- Meuse Delta i...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine-Meuse Delta in...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine- Meuse Delta i...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Neolithic cattle husbandry provided farming communities with vital products that brought about everl...
Reconstructing stock herding strategies and land use is key to comprehending past human social organ...
Cattle were of great importance for the Neolithic farmers of southeastern Europe, in particular as f...
Cattle were the predominant domestic animal in the Iron Age and Roman Netherlands, yet their managem...
The aim of this article is to examine the isotopic characterisation of domestic animals as it relate...
Cattle were the predominant domestic animal in the Iron Age and Roman Netherlands, yet their managem...
The detection of dairying is essential to understand prehistoric economies, particularly in northwes...
Cattle were of great importance for the Neolithic farmers of southeastern Europe, in particular as f...
YesBioarchaeological evidence suggests that the site of Grimes Graves, Norfolk, characterised by the...
YesThe Early Bronze Age barrows at Irthlingborough and Gayhurst in central England are notable for t...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine- Meuse Delta i...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine-Meuse Delta in...
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine- Meuse Delta i...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Cattle (Bos taurus) is the primary and the most dominant domesticated species in the Dutch Neolithic...
Neolithic cattle husbandry provided farming communities with vital products that brought about everl...
Reconstructing stock herding strategies and land use is key to comprehending past human social organ...
Cattle were of great importance for the Neolithic farmers of southeastern Europe, in particular as f...
Cattle were the predominant domestic animal in the Iron Age and Roman Netherlands, yet their managem...
The aim of this article is to examine the isotopic characterisation of domestic animals as it relate...
Cattle were the predominant domestic animal in the Iron Age and Roman Netherlands, yet their managem...
The detection of dairying is essential to understand prehistoric economies, particularly in northwes...
Cattle were of great importance for the Neolithic farmers of southeastern Europe, in particular as f...
YesBioarchaeological evidence suggests that the site of Grimes Graves, Norfolk, characterised by the...
YesThe Early Bronze Age barrows at Irthlingborough and Gayhurst in central England are notable for t...