Hedeby was the largest town in the Viking North. Investigations have identified imports at the site from central and northern Scandinavia revealing long-distance connections. The chronology of this trade, however, is unclear. Here, the authors use a typological-biomolecular approach to examine connections during the early Viking Age. The application of ZooMS to an assemblage of antler combs, stylistically dated to the ninth century AD, reveals nearly all were made of reindeer antler. As most craft production waste from Hedeby comprises red deer antler, it is argued that these combs were manufactured elsewhere, perhaps hundreds of kilometres further north. The results have implications for understanding of production and regional connectivit...
Significant contribution to the study of skeletal material in the Norse period using large internati...
Abstract Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to ha...
A small, shed antler fragment of a reindeer from Sjælland, Denmark has been dated to the Mid-Holocen...
Hedeby was the largest town in the Viking North. Investigations have identified imports at the site ...
This paper presents the results of the use of a minimally destructive biomolecular technique to expl...
In medieval archaeology there are long traditions for studying foreign, exotic material culture as p...
The character and chronology of Norse colonisation in Early Medieval northern Scotland (8th-10th cen...
This pilot project is a joint venture between natural and cultural scientists that share a common in...
Analysis of an important collection of bone/antler hair combs from Atlantic Scotland has illuminated...
The character and chronology of Norse colonisation in Early Medieval northern Scotland (8th–10th cen...
This paper explores the significance of an assemblage of combs and comb-making debris from a Norse s...
The University of Gotland has between the years 2006-2011 conducted seminar excavations in Västergar...
During the Viking Age, Arctic Scandinavia was a source of exquisite furs, down, walrus ivory, and ot...
This paper outlines the methodology of a doctoral research project at the University of York. The me...
This paper reflects upon the author’s work on Viking-Age combs and combmaking, and proposes an agend...
Significant contribution to the study of skeletal material in the Norse period using large internati...
Abstract Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to ha...
A small, shed antler fragment of a reindeer from Sjælland, Denmark has been dated to the Mid-Holocen...
Hedeby was the largest town in the Viking North. Investigations have identified imports at the site ...
This paper presents the results of the use of a minimally destructive biomolecular technique to expl...
In medieval archaeology there are long traditions for studying foreign, exotic material culture as p...
The character and chronology of Norse colonisation in Early Medieval northern Scotland (8th-10th cen...
This pilot project is a joint venture between natural and cultural scientists that share a common in...
Analysis of an important collection of bone/antler hair combs from Atlantic Scotland has illuminated...
The character and chronology of Norse colonisation in Early Medieval northern Scotland (8th–10th cen...
This paper explores the significance of an assemblage of combs and comb-making debris from a Norse s...
The University of Gotland has between the years 2006-2011 conducted seminar excavations in Västergar...
During the Viking Age, Arctic Scandinavia was a source of exquisite furs, down, walrus ivory, and ot...
This paper outlines the methodology of a doctoral research project at the University of York. The me...
This paper reflects upon the author’s work on Viking-Age combs and combmaking, and proposes an agend...
Significant contribution to the study of skeletal material in the Norse period using large internati...
Abstract Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to ha...
A small, shed antler fragment of a reindeer from Sjælland, Denmark has been dated to the Mid-Holocen...