Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...

Human provenance studies have been employing isotopic analyses to provide geographic location estimates in forensic and archaeological studies. As multi-isotopic approaches provide more specific location estimates than single isotopic analyses, new isotopic systems to evaluate human provenance would...

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Main Author: Plomp, E.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Root 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48530/isoarch.2021.011
https://dataverse.isoarch.org/citation?persistentId=doi:10.48530/isoarch.2021.011
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48530/isoarch.2021.011 2024-09-15T18:13:54+00:00 Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ... Plomp, E. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.48530/isoarch.2021.011 https://dataverse.isoarch.org/citation?persistentId=doi:10.48530/isoarch.2021.011 unknown Root Dataset dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48530/isoarch.2021.011 2024-09-02T10:27:22Z Human provenance studies have been employing isotopic analyses to provide geographic location estimates in forensic and archaeological studies. As multi-isotopic approaches provide more specific location estimates than single isotopic analyses, new isotopic systems to evaluate human provenance would provide additional information. Neodymium isotope analysis, recently applied to human tissues, is a particularly promising method in coastal regions as the system is less influenced by the isotopic values of the ocean in comparison to other isotopic systems, such as sulphur or strontium. This collection presents the first data on neodymium isotopes from modern dental elements (third molars) of 47 individuals born and raised in the Netherlands, Caribbean, Columbia and Iceland. Neodymium isotope composition was successfully analysed for 40 individuals, with neodymium concentration data available for 23 individuals. For 37 individuals the dental elements have also been analysed for strontium isotopes. This dataset ... Dataset Iceland DataCite
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Human provenance studies have been employing isotopic analyses to provide geographic location estimates in forensic and archaeological studies. As multi-isotopic approaches provide more specific location estimates than single isotopic analyses, new isotopic systems to evaluate human provenance would provide additional information. Neodymium isotope analysis, recently applied to human tissues, is a particularly promising method in coastal regions as the system is less influenced by the isotopic values of the ocean in comparison to other isotopic systems, such as sulphur or strontium. This collection presents the first data on neodymium isotopes from modern dental elements (third molars) of 47 individuals born and raised in the Netherlands, Caribbean, Columbia and Iceland. Neodymium isotope composition was successfully analysed for 40 individuals, with neodymium concentration data available for 23 individuals. For 37 individuals the dental elements have also been analysed for strontium isotopes. This dataset ...
format Dataset
author Plomp, E.
spellingShingle Plomp, E.
Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
author_facet Plomp, E.
author_sort Plomp, E.
title Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
title_short Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
title_full Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
title_fullStr Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
title_full_unstemmed Neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
title_sort neodymium isotopes in modern human dental enamel: an exploratory dataset ...
publisher Root
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48530/isoarch.2021.011
https://dataverse.isoarch.org/citation?persistentId=doi:10.48530/isoarch.2021.011
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48530/isoarch.2021.011
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