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Bone chemistry and the reconstruction of diet: Strontium discrimination in white-tailed deer
Authors:T. Douglas Price   Melissa Connor  John D. Parsen
Affiliation:1. Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, U.S.A.;2. Soil and Plant Analysis Laboratory, University of Wisconsin Extension, Madison, Wisconsin 53711, U.S.A.
Abstract:Studies of the relationship between the strontium content of human bone and past diet are still in an experimental stage. Because of the low frequency of carnivore remains at most archaeological sites and the absence of information on local strontium levels, it has been difficult to (1) estimate dietary intake for a prehistoric population, and (2) to compare prehistoric populations from spatially disparate areas. However, examination of strontium/calcium ratios in a modern herbivore may help to alleviate these problems. Bones from modern white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were compared with deer diet in Wisconsin. An observed ratio between deer bone and diet in terms of a strontium/calcium index was calculated at 0204, which compares favourably with observed ratios reported for other mammals. Prehistoric white-tailed deer are used in the analysis of two Late Archaic sites in the midwestern U.S.A. The strontium levels in deer can be used as a baseline for comparison between sites. The prehistoric subsistence patterns are generally comparable, with hunting accounting for the bulk of the diet.
Keywords:dietary reconstruction   trace elements   strontium   white-tailed deer   archaic   Eastern   sexing   palaeonutrition
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