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Calving seasonality at Pool,Orkney during the first millennium AD: an investigation using intra-tooth isotope ratio analysis of cattle molar enamel
Authors:Jacqueline Towers  Ingrid Mainland  Janet Montgomery  Julie Bond
Affiliation:1. School of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7 1DP, UK;2. Archaeology Institute, University of the Highlands and Islands, Orkney College, Kirkwall KW15 1LX, Orkney, UK;3. Department of Archaeology, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
Abstract:The identification of dairying is essential if we are to understand economies of the past, particularly in northwest Europe, where a high degree of lactose tolerance suggests that fresh milk has long been a significant food product. This paper explores a possible link between economic focus and seasonality of calving. Although cattle (Bos taurus) can breed throughout the year, animals living in temperate regions with minimal or no human management tend to breed seasonally, their breeding behaviour being strongly influenced by the availability of food. In order to achieve a year-round supply of fresh milk in the past, it is likely that multiple-season calving was necessary, which would have required additional husbandry effort. Alternatively, for meat-focussed economies or those based on storable dairy products, a strategy of single-season calving in spring may have been favoured to maximise the utilisation of spring and summer vegetation. Cattle birth seasonality is investigated through isotope ratio analysis (δ18O, δ13C) of tooth enamel. Results for cattle from Pool, Orkney dating to the latter part of the first millennium AD suggest that calving occurred during at least three seasons implying that the continuous provision of fresh milk was of economic importance.
Keywords:Cattle  Birth Seasonality  Dairying  Fresh Milk  Carbon and Oxygen Stable Isotopes  Tooth Enamel  Orkney
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