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Aquatic resources in human diet in the Late Mesolithic in Northern France and Luxembourg: insights from carbon,nitrogen and sulphur isotope ratios
Authors:Dorothée G Drucker  Frédérique Valentin  Corinne Thevenet  Daniel Mordant  Richard Cottiaux  Dominique Delsate  Wim Van Neer
Institution:1.Department of Geosciences, Biogeology,Eberhardt Karls Universit?t Tübingen,Tübingen,Germany;2.CNRS, UMR 7041, Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie,Nanterre cedex,France;3.UMR 8215, Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie,Nanterre cedex,France;4.Bois-le-Roi,France;5.INRAP, UMR 8215, Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie,Nanterre cedex,France;6.Luxembourg Natural History Museum, Paleontology,Luxembourg,Luxembourg;7.Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences,Brussels,Belgium;8.Laboratory of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Genomics,University of Leuven,Leuven,Belgium
Abstract:We investigated the contribution of freshwater resources to the diet of seven Late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers (ca. 5300–7000 BC) from Northern France and Luxembourg using stable isotope ratios. In addition to the carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios (δ13C, δ15N), we explored the potential of the sulphur isotopic ratios (δ34S) to detect and quantify the proportion of protein derived from aquatic foodstuff. In only two sites, animal remains from an associated settlement were available and subsequently examined to decipher the isotopic differential between terrestrial and freshwater resources. The quantification of their relative contribution was simulated using a Bayesian mixing model. The measurements revealed a significant overlap in δ13C values between freshwater and terrestrial resources and a large range of δ15N values for each food category. The δ34S values of the aquatic and terrestrial animals were clearly distinct at the settlement in the Seine valley, while the results on fish from Belgium demonstrated a possible overlap in δ34S values between freshwater and terrestrial resources. Local freshwater ecosystem likely contributed to ca. 30–40 % of the protein in the diet of the individuals found in the Seine settlement. Out of this context, the isotopic signature and thus contribution of the available aquatic foods was difficult to assess. Another potential source of dietary protein is wild boar. Depending on the local context, collagen δ34S values may contribute to better assessment of the relative contribution of freshwater and terrestrial resources.
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