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A stable isotope method for identifying transatlantic origin of pig (Sus scrofa) remains at French and English fishing stations in Newfoundland
Authors:Eric J Guiry  Stéphane Noël  Eric Tourigny  Vaughan Grimes
Institution:1. Department of Archaeology, Queen''s College, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 210 Prince Philip Drive, St John''s, NL A1C 5S7, Canada;2. Laboratoires d’archéologie, Département d’histoire, Université Laval, Québec City, QC G1V 0A6, Canada;3. Matrix Research Ltd., 395 Johnston Ave, Quesnel, BC V2J 3M6, Canada;4. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:From the 16th century onward, various European nations shared fishing spaces off the coast of Newfoundland in an effort to provide salt-fish products to supplement increasing European demand. Faunal remains excavated at seasonal and permanent Newfoundland fishing stations indicate that pigs were the primary mammal species consumed by cod fishermen. It is not clear whether these pig remains derive from salt pork and/or live pigs imported from Europe or, rather, from pigs bred and raised in Newfoundland. Based on the notion that Newfoundland-raised pigs would have had greater access to marine-derived foods from nearby fisheries compared to their European-raised counterparts, we analyzed stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values from 28 pigs and 117 other faunal specimens from Dos de Cheval (EfAx-09) and Ferryland (CgAf-02) in order to identify individuals with marine or terrestrial isotope dietary signatures. Results indicating two distinct groups of pigs with mean δ13C and δ15N values differing by ∼6‰ and ∼9‰, respectively, suggest differing pig-product origins at each site. This method for identifying the transatlantic origin of pig remains has potential to shed light on patterns in the provisioning of the early European transatlantic fishing industry and inter-community relations. It may also allow for the development of more sophisticated body part representation models for zooarchaeological reconstruction of barreled salt pork use.
Keywords:Stable carbon isotope  Stable nitrogen isotope  Diet  Salt pork  Pigs  North Atlantic  Fishery
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