Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavation. Excavations are costly and destructive, and practically impossible in some lake and wetland environments. We present here an alternative approach, providing direct evidence from lake sediments using DNA metabarcoding, steroid lipid biomarkers (bile acids) and from traditional environmental analyses. Applied to an early Medieval Celtic settlement in Ireland (a crannog) this approach provides a site chronology and direct evidence of human occupation, crops, animal farming and on-site slaughtering. This is the first independently-dated, continuous molecular archive of human activity from an archaeological site, demonstrating a link between a...
Acknowledgements Special acknowledgements go to Audrey Innes for her laboratory support, to Laura Mc...
Over the last decade, an increasing number of studies have used lake sediment DNA to trace past land...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions – visible yet inaccessible, wi...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions—visible yet inaccessible, wides...
Roundhouses are ubiquitous features of Iron Age landscapes across North West Europe, yet the way the...
The Faroe Islands, a North Atlantic archipelago between Norway and Iceland, were settled by Viking e...
This dataset includes sedimentary ancient DNA, lipid biomarker, and tephra geochemical data from a l...
The Anglo-Normans first introduced fallow deer (Dama dama) to Ireland in the thirteenth century, how...
Oakbank crannog is a Late Bronze/Early Iron Age lake dwelling in Loch Tay, Scotland. The initial fre...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
The Mesolithic-to-Neolithic transition marked the time when a hunter-gatherer economy gave way to ag...
Acknowledgements Special acknowledgements go to Audrey Innes for her laboratory support, to Laura Mc...
Over the last decade, an increasing number of studies have used lake sediment DNA to trace past land...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavati...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions – visible yet inaccessible, wi...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions—visible yet inaccessible, wides...
Roundhouses are ubiquitous features of Iron Age landscapes across North West Europe, yet the way the...
The Faroe Islands, a North Atlantic archipelago between Norway and Iceland, were settled by Viking e...
This dataset includes sedimentary ancient DNA, lipid biomarker, and tephra geochemical data from a l...
The Anglo-Normans first introduced fallow deer (Dama dama) to Ireland in the thirteenth century, how...
Oakbank crannog is a Late Bronze/Early Iron Age lake dwelling in Loch Tay, Scotland. The initial fre...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
The Mesolithic-to-Neolithic transition marked the time when a hunter-gatherer economy gave way to ag...
Acknowledgements Special acknowledgements go to Audrey Innes for her laboratory support, to Laura Mc...
Over the last decade, an increasing number of studies have used lake sediment DNA to trace past land...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...