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Dietary freshwater reservoir effects and the radiocarbon ages of prehistoric human bones from Zvejnieki, Latvia

  • John Meadows*
  • , Valdis Berziņš
  • , Ute Brinker
  • , Harald Lübke
  • , Ulrich Schmölcke
  • , Andreas Staude
  • , Ilga Zagorska
  • , Gunita Zariņa
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Schleswig-Holstein State Museums Foundation
  • Kiel University
  • State Authority for Culture and Preservation of Monuments
  • Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing Berlin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Aquatic food resources (fish and molluscs)were exploited intensively at Rinnukalns, a Neolithic freshwater shell midden at the outlet of Lake Burtnieks, north-eastern Latvia. Stable isotope data (d15N and d13C) from a rich fishbone assemblage and a wide range of terrestrial species complement published results on faunal samples from the famous prehistoric cemetery and settlement at Zvejnieki, on the same lake. Stable isotope data show that freshwater food resources made substantial but varying contributions to human diets at Zvejnieki and Rinnukalns throughout the Mesolithic and Neolithic. Our research has also shown significant radiocarbon freshwater reservoir effects (FRE) in aquatic species from Lake Burtnieks, which would presumably have affected the radiocarbon ages of prehistoric human remains, and may explain some apparent anomalies in published dates from Zvejnieki burials. We present new radiocarbon and stable isotope results from a multiple burial at Zvejnieki, of five contemporaneous individuals, whose remains are being re-examined to assess evidence of interpersonal violence. Contrary to earlier interpretations, our data show that differences between individuals in the amount of fish consumed would account for the 300-year spread in their radiocarbon ages, given the isotope data and our estimate of the effective FRE in local fish. Our FRE-corrected calibrated dates for these five individuals are therefore compatible with a single burial date. We propose that these models can be used to correct the calibrated radiocarbon ages of other Zvejnieki burials for dietary FRE, provided that the individuals concerned consumed mainly local resources. The same methodology can also be applied elsewhere, as long as local isotopic and FRE values are well understood, and values for terrestrial and aquatic species are sufficiently different.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)678-689
JournalJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
    SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

OECD Field of Science

  • 6.1 History and Archaeology

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