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Prehistoric dietary adaptations among hunter-fisher-gatherers from the Little Sea of Lake Baikal,Siberia, Russian Federation
Authors:M. Anne Katzenberg  Hugh G. McKenzie  Robert J. Losey  Olga I. Goriunova  Andrzej Weber
Affiliation:1. Department of Archaeology, University of Calgary, 2500 University Dr. N.W., Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada;2. Department of Anthropology, Economics and Political Science, Grant MacEwan University, 10700-104 Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta T5J 4S2, Canada;3. Department of Anthropology, 13-15 HM Tory Building, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H4, Canada;4. Laboratory of Archaeology and Palaeoecology, Irkutsk State University and Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Russian Academy of Sciences (Siberian Branch), Russia
Abstract:Dietary adaptations of prehistoric hunter-gatherers from Neolithic and Early Bronze Age cemeteries in the Little Sea region of Cis-Baikal (the region to the west and north of Lake Baikal) are explored using stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen. Stable isotope data, including stable carbon isotopes from bone carbonate, are presented for 22 individuals from the site of Kurma XI, dated to approximately 6500 B.P. to 4000 B.P. Data are compared to previously analyzed individuals from the larger Early Bronze Age cemetery, Khuzhir-Nuge XIV (Katzenberg et al., 2009 JAS) and to smaller sites located along the shore of the Little Sea, including sites on Olkhon Island. An extensive collection of fauna, both prehistoric and modern, from the Little Sea and neighboring regions is also analyzed for stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen. Clear distinctions are found in modern fish recovered from the Little Sea, in contrast to those from the open waters of the lake and from the neighboring Angara and Lena rivers. Considerable variation is seen in stable carbon isotope ratios from fish while stable nitrogen isotope ratios are not as variable, regardless of habitat. Isotope source modeling is used to assist in reconstructing past dietary adaptations. While there is ample evidence from other studies for cultural change over this temporal span, diet appears to have been relatively stable.
Keywords:Asia   Hunter-gatherers   Fishing   Stable carbon isotopes   Stable nitrogen isotopes
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