posted on 2017-01-17, 11:45authored byA. C. Colonese, A. Lucquin, E. P. Guedes, R. M. Thomas, J. Best, B. T. Fothergill, N. Sykes, A. Foster, H. Miller, K. Poole, M. Maltby, M. Von Tersch, O. E. Craig
Poultry products are rarely considered when reconstructing pottery use through organic residue analysis, impinging upon our understanding of the changing role of these animals in the past. Here we evaluate an isotopic approach for distinguishing chicken fats from other animal products. We compare the carbon isotopes of fatty acids extracted from modern tissues and archaeological bones and demonstrate that archaeological bones from contexts associated with pottery provide suitable reference ranges for distinguishing omnivorous animal products (e.g. pigs vs. chickens) in pots. When applied to pottery from the Anglo-Saxon site of Flixborough, England, we succeeded in identifying residues derived from chicken fats that otherwise could not be distinguished from other monogastric and ruminant animals using modern reference values only. This provides the first direct evidence for the processing of poultry or their products in pottery. The results highlight the utility of ‘in-situ’ archaeological bone lipids to identify omnivorous animal-derived lipids in archaeological ceramic vessels.
Funding
This work was supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council as part of the project “Cultural and Scientific Perspectives of Human-Chicken Interactions” (Grant No AH/L006979/1) and by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) of Brazil. Open Access funded by Arts and Humanities Research Council
History
Citation
Journal of Archaeological Science, 2017, 78, pp. 179-192 (14)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Archaeology and Ancient History/Core Staff
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Journal of Archaeological Science
Publisher
Elsevier, Association for Environmental Archaeology