Bone samples from the Greenland Viking colony provide us with a unique opportunity to test and use 14C dating of remains of humans who depended upon food of mixed marine and terrestrial origin. We investigated the skeletons of 27 Greenland Norse people excavated from churchyard burials from the late 10th to the middle 15th century. The stable carbon isotopic composition (delta-13C) of the bone collagen reveals that the diet of the Greenland Norse changed dramatically from predominantly terrestrial food at the time of Eric the Red around AD 1000 to predominantly marine food toward the end of the settlement period around AD 1450. We find that it is possible to 14C-date these bones of mixed marine and terrestrial origin precisely when proper c...
The methodology for correcting radiocarbon (14C) ages for a marine reservoir effect is now reasonabl...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
We report here on stable carbon and nitrogen isotope measurements of human and faunal bone collagen ...
ABSTRACT. Bone samples from the Greenland Viking colony provide us with a unique opportunity to test...
From the 12th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Trondheim, June 24-28, 1985.The relations...
From the 19th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Keble College, Oxford, England, April 3-7...
This paper examines 2 potential sources of the radiocarbon offset between human and terrestrial mamm...
Previous stable isotope studies of modern and archaeological faunal samples from sites around Lake M...
The so-called Middle Settlement (Mellembygden) of Norse/Viking Greenland has received far less atten...
In this study, human remains from the Neolithic stalled cairn of the Knowe of Rowiegar, Rousay, Orkn...
We obtained stable isotope signatures (13C, 15N) and AMS radiocarbon dates for a small set of Dorset...
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the is...
Human burials from the cemetery at the Rounala church, northern Sweden, were radiocarbon (C-14) date...
The Limfjord in Denmark held a prominent position throughout Prehistory as a natural communication p...
This paper examines two potential sources of the 14C offset between human and terrestrial mammal (ho...
The methodology for correcting radiocarbon (14C) ages for a marine reservoir effect is now reasonabl...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
We report here on stable carbon and nitrogen isotope measurements of human and faunal bone collagen ...
ABSTRACT. Bone samples from the Greenland Viking colony provide us with a unique opportunity to test...
From the 12th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Trondheim, June 24-28, 1985.The relations...
From the 19th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Keble College, Oxford, England, April 3-7...
This paper examines 2 potential sources of the radiocarbon offset between human and terrestrial mamm...
Previous stable isotope studies of modern and archaeological faunal samples from sites around Lake M...
The so-called Middle Settlement (Mellembygden) of Norse/Viking Greenland has received far less atten...
In this study, human remains from the Neolithic stalled cairn of the Knowe of Rowiegar, Rousay, Orkn...
We obtained stable isotope signatures (13C, 15N) and AMS radiocarbon dates for a small set of Dorset...
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the is...
Human burials from the cemetery at the Rounala church, northern Sweden, were radiocarbon (C-14) date...
The Limfjord in Denmark held a prominent position throughout Prehistory as a natural communication p...
This paper examines two potential sources of the 14C offset between human and terrestrial mammal (ho...
The methodology for correcting radiocarbon (14C) ages for a marine reservoir effect is now reasonabl...
The change in subsistence at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition in Denmark is often characterized a...
We report here on stable carbon and nitrogen isotope measurements of human and faunal bone collagen ...