Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland

In this study, ?13C and ?15N of bone samples from 83 skeletons (79 humans, 2 horses, and 2 dogs) excavated from pagan and early Christian graves from 21 localities in Iceland are used to reconstruct diet of the early settlers in Iceland and possible differences in diet depending on the distance betw...

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Main Authors: Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E, Heinemeier, J, Arneborg, J, Lynnerup, N, ?lafsson, G, o?ga, G
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Radiocarbon 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702
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spelling ftunivarizonaojs:oai:journals.uair.arizona.edu:article/3702 2023-05-15T16:46:26+02:00 Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E Heinemeier, J Arneborg, J Lynnerup, N ?lafsson, G o?ga, G 2010-01-01 application/pdf https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702 eng eng Radiocarbon https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702/pdf https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702 Radiocarbon; Vol 52, No 2 (2010); 682-696 0033-8222 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2010 ftunivarizonaojs 2020-11-14T17:53:01Z In this study, ?13C and ?15N of bone samples from 83 skeletons (79 humans, 2 horses, and 2 dogs) excavated from pagan and early Christian graves from 21 localities in Iceland are used to reconstruct diet of the early settlers in Iceland and possible differences in diet depending on the distance between the excavation site and the seashore. We have radiocarbon dated 47 of these skeletons and used the carbon isotopic composition (?13C) to estimate and correct for the marine reservoir effect (the 14C difference between terrestrial and mixed marine organisms). The reservoir-corrected ages lie in the range of AD 780?1270 (68.2% probability). Reservoir age corrections were checked by comparing 14C dates of a horse (terrestrial diet), a dog (highly marine diet), and a human (mixed diet) from the same burial. The range in measured marine protein percentage in individual diet is from about 10% up to 55%, mostly depending on the geographical position (distance from the sea) of the excavation site. We had access to the skeleton (AAR-5908) of the Sk?lholt bishop P?ll J?nsson whose remains are enshrined at the Episcopal residence in Sk?lholt, southern Iceland. According to written sources, the bishop died in AD 1211. Using our dietary reconstruction, his bones were about 17% marine, which is within the range of human skeletons from the same area, and the reservoir-corrected calibrated 14C age of the skeleton is in accord with the historical date. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Journals at the University of Arizona
institution Open Polar
collection Journals at the University of Arizona
op_collection_id ftunivarizonaojs
language English
description In this study, ?13C and ?15N of bone samples from 83 skeletons (79 humans, 2 horses, and 2 dogs) excavated from pagan and early Christian graves from 21 localities in Iceland are used to reconstruct diet of the early settlers in Iceland and possible differences in diet depending on the distance between the excavation site and the seashore. We have radiocarbon dated 47 of these skeletons and used the carbon isotopic composition (?13C) to estimate and correct for the marine reservoir effect (the 14C difference between terrestrial and mixed marine organisms). The reservoir-corrected ages lie in the range of AD 780?1270 (68.2% probability). Reservoir age corrections were checked by comparing 14C dates of a horse (terrestrial diet), a dog (highly marine diet), and a human (mixed diet) from the same burial. The range in measured marine protein percentage in individual diet is from about 10% up to 55%, mostly depending on the geographical position (distance from the sea) of the excavation site. We had access to the skeleton (AAR-5908) of the Sk?lholt bishop P?ll J?nsson whose remains are enshrined at the Episcopal residence in Sk?lholt, southern Iceland. According to written sources, the bishop died in AD 1211. Using our dietary reconstruction, his bones were about 17% marine, which is within the range of human skeletons from the same area, and the reservoir-corrected calibrated 14C age of the skeleton is in accord with the historical date.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E
Heinemeier, J
Arneborg, J
Lynnerup, N
?lafsson, G
o?ga, G
spellingShingle Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E
Heinemeier, J
Arneborg, J
Lynnerup, N
?lafsson, G
o?ga, G
Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
author_facet Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E
Heinemeier, J
Arneborg, J
Lynnerup, N
?lafsson, G
o?ga, G
author_sort Sveinbj?rnsd?ttir, ? E
title Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
title_short Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
title_full Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
title_fullStr Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Reconstruction and Reservoir Correction of 14C Dates on Bones from Pagan and Early Christian Graves in Iceland
title_sort dietary reconstruction and reservoir correction of 14c dates on bones from pagan and early christian graves in iceland
publisher Radiocarbon
publishDate 2010
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Radiocarbon; Vol 52, No 2 (2010); 682-696
0033-8222
op_relation https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702/pdf
https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3702
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