The aim of the project was to test the hypothesis, using oxygen and strontium isotopes, that a group of burials in the Late Roman cemetery of Lankhills, Winchester, southern England, were migrants from the Danube region of central Europe. The method assumes that the oxygen isotope composition of immigrants from this locale would be significantly more depleted that any one British origin and that the restricted range in Sr isotope compositions produced by chalk in the overlying biosphere of southern England would discriminate between the local population and settlers from elsewhere. As a control for the immigrant group a sample of Romano-British individuals were examined to provide a comparative data set. The results showed that the majority...
Stable isotopes present in local ground water get into people's teeth before they are 12 years old, ...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Strontium and oxygen isotope analysis of human remains from the early La Tène (fourth/third century ...
Artefacts and burial rites in the late Roman cemetery at Lankhills School, Winchester, southern Engl...
The transition from Roman Britain to early Anglo-Saxon England, traditionally described as the Adven...
This paper presents the results of a multi-isotopic (oxygen, strontium, carbon and nitrogen isotopes...
Reconstructions of ancient mobility based on strontium isotopes are only ever as reliable as estimat...
Early Medieval England is described historically as a time when people migrated from the Continent t...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
Oxygen isotope analysis of archaeological skeletal remains is an increasingly popular tool to study ...
In order to investigate how the population diversity at major Romano-British urban centres compared ...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
This paper presents a compilation of strontium and oxygen isotope data from human tooth enamel that ...
YesIron Age chariot burials in the UK are rare and restricted in their distribution. Historically it...
Contrasting lifestyles are recorded by the isotope composition of Bronze Age Beaker people (c. 2500–...
Stable isotopes present in local ground water get into people's teeth before they are 12 years old, ...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Strontium and oxygen isotope analysis of human remains from the early La Tène (fourth/third century ...
Artefacts and burial rites in the late Roman cemetery at Lankhills School, Winchester, southern Engl...
The transition from Roman Britain to early Anglo-Saxon England, traditionally described as the Adven...
This paper presents the results of a multi-isotopic (oxygen, strontium, carbon and nitrogen isotopes...
Reconstructions of ancient mobility based on strontium isotopes are only ever as reliable as estimat...
Early Medieval England is described historically as a time when people migrated from the Continent t...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
Oxygen isotope analysis of archaeological skeletal remains is an increasingly popular tool to study ...
In order to investigate how the population diversity at major Romano-British urban centres compared ...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
This paper presents a compilation of strontium and oxygen isotope data from human tooth enamel that ...
YesIron Age chariot burials in the UK are rare and restricted in their distribution. Historically it...
Contrasting lifestyles are recorded by the isotope composition of Bronze Age Beaker people (c. 2500–...
Stable isotopes present in local ground water get into people's teeth before they are 12 years old, ...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Strontium and oxygen isotope analysis of human remains from the early La Tène (fourth/third century ...