Provenance, residential mobility and migration are recurrent themes in archaeological research. Since the 1980s, initially in America and Northern Europe, strontium isotope analysis of archaeological skeletal remains has revolutionized research on provenance and mobility. Nevertheless, such research normally identifies migration and mobility simply as events, rather than processes that need to be further characterized into their particulars. In Aegean Archaeology, more than ten years following the first ever announcement of strontium isotope results from Greece at the 10th Cretological Congress in 2006 and the first papers using this methodology, new to this context research teams have started to contribute into an ongoing scholarship in th...
Migration and trade are issues important to the understanding of ancient cultures. There are many wa...
We measured 87Sr/86Sr for all available human remains (n = 40) dating from the Mesolithic to the Bro...
There is a strong relation between people’s structured identities and their chemical biographies: th...
This paper discusses the first integrated strontium and oxygen isotope ratio results from human rema...
Strontium isotope ratios are widely used in archaeology to differentiate between local and non-local...
This study presents the first Sr-87/Sr-86 isotope results obtained on Neolithic humans from Southern...
This article presents evidence of population movements in Thessaly, Greece, during the Early Iron Ag...
Using strontium isotope analysis, we investigated the mobility of Roman (1st to 7th century AD) and ...
The study of migrations provides crucial information for the archaeological research. In fact, there...
Questions about how farming and the Neolithic way of life spread across Europe have been hotly debat...
The present study discusses aspects of human mobility in Ceramic Neolithic (ca. 5200/5000–4000 BC) a...
Within the bones, teeth, and other tissues of every person lies a series of elements that can be use...
Archaeological data and written sources suggest that the Longobards were a community “on the move”. ...
Strontium isotope analysis of archeological skeletal materials is a highly effective and commonly em...
The aim of this thesis is to investigate the strength and weaknesses of strontium analysis as a meth...
Migration and trade are issues important to the understanding of ancient cultures. There are many wa...
We measured 87Sr/86Sr for all available human remains (n = 40) dating from the Mesolithic to the Bro...
There is a strong relation between people’s structured identities and their chemical biographies: th...
This paper discusses the first integrated strontium and oxygen isotope ratio results from human rema...
Strontium isotope ratios are widely used in archaeology to differentiate between local and non-local...
This study presents the first Sr-87/Sr-86 isotope results obtained on Neolithic humans from Southern...
This article presents evidence of population movements in Thessaly, Greece, during the Early Iron Ag...
Using strontium isotope analysis, we investigated the mobility of Roman (1st to 7th century AD) and ...
The study of migrations provides crucial information for the archaeological research. In fact, there...
Questions about how farming and the Neolithic way of life spread across Europe have been hotly debat...
The present study discusses aspects of human mobility in Ceramic Neolithic (ca. 5200/5000–4000 BC) a...
Within the bones, teeth, and other tissues of every person lies a series of elements that can be use...
Archaeological data and written sources suggest that the Longobards were a community “on the move”. ...
Strontium isotope analysis of archeological skeletal materials is a highly effective and commonly em...
The aim of this thesis is to investigate the strength and weaknesses of strontium analysis as a meth...
Migration and trade are issues important to the understanding of ancient cultures. There are many wa...
We measured 87Sr/86Sr for all available human remains (n = 40) dating from the Mesolithic to the Bro...
There is a strong relation between people’s structured identities and their chemical biographies: th...