Carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of bone collagen in woolly mammoths, coeval her- bivores and predators, as well as hominins, allow researchers to quantify the proportion of meat consumed by late Neanderthals and early mod- ern humans in Europe. The proportions of con- sumed mammoth meat were found to be very high for late Neanderthals in sites from western France and Belgium between 45 and 40 ka, and for early modern humans from Belgium, Czech Republic, Crimea and western Russia, between 40 and 30 ka. A possible contribution of fresh- water resources was excluded in Belgium and Crimea using a novel approach based on single compound amino acid nitrogen isotopes and confirmed that mammoth consumption was the source of the high nitrog...
Identifying past hominin diets is a key to understanding adaptation and biological evolution. Bone c...
Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), horse (Equus spp.) and bison (Bison spp.) coexisted with a v...
Acknowledgements This research was funded by a Leverhulme Research Project Grant (ref: RPG-2017-410 ...
Carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of bone collagen in woolly mammoths, coeval her- bivores an...
The woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) was an emblematic and key species of the so-called mammot...
Relatively high 15N abundances in bone collagen of early anatomically modern humans in Europe have o...
The study investigated ecological aspects of the mammoth steppe ecosystem in NW Europe with a specia...
Higher δ15N values in bone collagen of mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) compared with coeval large he...
Correlating cultural, technological and ecological aspects of both Upper Pleistocene modern humans (...
Correlating cultural, technological and ecological aspects of both Upper Pleistocene modern humans (...
Isotope and archeological analyses of Paleolithic food webs have suggested that Neandertal subsisten...
The Pleistocene mammoth steppe was a vast biome that stretched from northwestern Europe to central C...
An isotopic investigation of upper Pleistocene mammal bones and teeth from Scladina cave (Sclayn, Be...
International audienceWe report here on the isotopic analysis (carbon and nitrogen) of collagen extr...
Woolly mammoth fossils on an island where the species eventually dies out, human and animal fossils ...
Identifying past hominin diets is a key to understanding adaptation and biological evolution. Bone c...
Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), horse (Equus spp.) and bison (Bison spp.) coexisted with a v...
Acknowledgements This research was funded by a Leverhulme Research Project Grant (ref: RPG-2017-410 ...
Carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of bone collagen in woolly mammoths, coeval her- bivores an...
The woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) was an emblematic and key species of the so-called mammot...
Relatively high 15N abundances in bone collagen of early anatomically modern humans in Europe have o...
The study investigated ecological aspects of the mammoth steppe ecosystem in NW Europe with a specia...
Higher δ15N values in bone collagen of mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) compared with coeval large he...
Correlating cultural, technological and ecological aspects of both Upper Pleistocene modern humans (...
Correlating cultural, technological and ecological aspects of both Upper Pleistocene modern humans (...
Isotope and archeological analyses of Paleolithic food webs have suggested that Neandertal subsisten...
The Pleistocene mammoth steppe was a vast biome that stretched from northwestern Europe to central C...
An isotopic investigation of upper Pleistocene mammal bones and teeth from Scladina cave (Sclayn, Be...
International audienceWe report here on the isotopic analysis (carbon and nitrogen) of collagen extr...
Woolly mammoth fossils on an island where the species eventually dies out, human and animal fossils ...
Identifying past hominin diets is a key to understanding adaptation and biological evolution. Bone c...
Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), horse (Equus spp.) and bison (Bison spp.) coexisted with a v...
Acknowledgements This research was funded by a Leverhulme Research Project Grant (ref: RPG-2017-410 ...