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Integrating Stable Isotope and Zooarchaeological Analyses in Historical Archaeology: A Case Study from the Urban Nineteenth-Century Commonwealth Block Site, Melbourne, Australia
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posted on 2020-07-31, 11:46 authored by Eric J Guiry, B Harpley, Z Jones, C SmithThis paper presents the first use of bone collagen stable isotope analyses for the purpose of reconstructing historical animal husbandry and trade practices in Australia. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of 51 domesticate and commensal specimens demonstrate that meats consumed at the mid to late nineteenth-century Commonwealth Block site in Melbourne derived from animals with a diverse range of isotopic signatures. Potential factors contributing to this diversity including animal trade and variability in local animal husbandry practices are discussed. From these results we suggest that stable isotope-based paleodietary reconstructions have significant potential to illuminate a variety of human-animal relations in Australia's historical period as well as other New World contexts. © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
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Citation
International Journal of Historical Archaeology, volume 18, pp. 415–440 (2014)Author affiliation
School of Archaeology and Ancient HistoryVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
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International Journal of Historical ArchaeologyVolume
18Issue
3Pagination
415 - 440Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLCissn
1092-7697eissn
1573-7748Copyright date
2014Publisher DOI
Language
enPublisher version
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10761-014-0264-3#Abs1Usage metrics
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