The Scythians are frequently presented, in popular and academic thought alike, as highly mobile warrior nomads who posed a great economic risk to growing Mediterranean empires from the Iron Age into the Classical period. Archaeological studies provide evidence of first millennium BCE urbanism in the steppe while historical texts reference steppe agriculture, challenging traditional characterizations of Scythians as nomads. However, there have been few direct studies of the diet and mobility of populations living in the Pontic steppe and forest-steppe during the Scythian era. Here, we analyse strontium, oxygen, and carbon isotope data from human tooth enamel samples, as well as nitrogen and carbon isotope data of bone collagen, at several Ir...
This article presents evidence of population movements in Thessaly, Greece, during the Early Iron Ag...
International audienceObjectives: Subsistence strategies are of great interest for understanding how...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...
High mobility among Scythian populations is often cited as the driving force behind pan-regional int...
Questions concerning mobility and migration as well as subsistence strategies of past societies have...
The traditional concept of „nomadic“ cultures as mobile and economically simple is nowadays increasi...
We present the first comprehensive multi-isotopic data on human and animal remains from the Final Ne...
The Migration Period (375 to 568 CE) of Central and Eastern Europe was a tumultuous time politically...
We conducted a multi-isotope study of five fifth-century AD cemeteries in modern-day Hungary to dete...
We conducted a multi-isotope study of five fifth-century AD cemeteries in modern-day Hungary to dete...
The 220 abundantly equipped burials from the Late Iron Age cemetery of Münsingen (420 – 240 BC) mark...
This paper presents the results of new stable isotopes (carbon and nitrogen) analysis of human, faun...
The Avar were nomadic people from Central Asia who migrated into the Carpathian Basin in Central-Eas...
The aim of this thesis is to shed light on the beginning of the Early Iron Age in Greece (1100 – 900...
Sulphur isotopes in archaeological bone collagen are not routinely analysed in palaeodietary studies...
This article presents evidence of population movements in Thessaly, Greece, during the Early Iron Ag...
International audienceObjectives: Subsistence strategies are of great interest for understanding how...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...
High mobility among Scythian populations is often cited as the driving force behind pan-regional int...
Questions concerning mobility and migration as well as subsistence strategies of past societies have...
The traditional concept of „nomadic“ cultures as mobile and economically simple is nowadays increasi...
We present the first comprehensive multi-isotopic data on human and animal remains from the Final Ne...
The Migration Period (375 to 568 CE) of Central and Eastern Europe was a tumultuous time politically...
We conducted a multi-isotope study of five fifth-century AD cemeteries in modern-day Hungary to dete...
We conducted a multi-isotope study of five fifth-century AD cemeteries in modern-day Hungary to dete...
The 220 abundantly equipped burials from the Late Iron Age cemetery of Münsingen (420 – 240 BC) mark...
This paper presents the results of new stable isotopes (carbon and nitrogen) analysis of human, faun...
The Avar were nomadic people from Central Asia who migrated into the Carpathian Basin in Central-Eas...
The aim of this thesis is to shed light on the beginning of the Early Iron Age in Greece (1100 – 900...
Sulphur isotopes in archaeological bone collagen are not routinely analysed in palaeodietary studies...
This article presents evidence of population movements in Thessaly, Greece, during the Early Iron Ag...
International audienceObjectives: Subsistence strategies are of great interest for understanding how...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...