Antlers far and wide: biomolecular identification of Scandinavian hair combs from Ribe, Denmark, 720-900 CE

We used biomolecular methods to identify the faunal species present in hair combs and associated workshop debris discovered at the site Posthustorvet in the trading town of Ribe, Denmark, in contexts dated 720-900 CE. The comb finds included four unusual items that have an uncommon but geographicall...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rey-Iglesia, Alba, de Jager, Deon, Presslee, Samantha, Skytte Qvistgaard, Sarah, Sindbæk, Søren, Lorenzen, Eline
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7665569
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7665569
Description
Summary:We used biomolecular methods to identify the faunal species present in hair combs and associated workshop debris discovered at the site Posthustorvet in the trading town of Ribe, Denmark, in contexts dated 720-900 CE. The comb finds included four unusual items that have an uncommon but geographically characteristic Scandinavian style. These four early ‘Scandinavian-type’ combs, crafted from antler, were found in contexts 720-740 CE, and were identified as moose (Alces alces) and reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) using a combination of peptide mass fingerprinting (ZooMS) and ancient DNA analysis. Our study provides the first confirmed use of moose antler combs in Denmark in the Late Iron Age/Viking Age. Neither moose or reindeer occurred naturally at that time in Denmark, and their closest habitats in the eighth century were on the Scandinavian Peninsula. Based on DNA, the comb identified as moose belonged to the western European mitogenomic group, which has been identified in contemporary samples from Scandinavia and Poland, and in one early Holocene sample from Germany. Comparison with other comb finds and extensive workshop debris from the Posthustorvet site reflect a range of different comb-types and raw materials at the site. Our ZooMS and DNA findings, in the context of the absence of associated workshop debris of moose or reindeer during the early phases of the site, support that the four early ‘Scandinavian-type’ combs were brought to the site as finished items by travellers. Our results confirm that visitors from the Scandinavian Peninsula were present in Ribe, a place of trade at the southern edge of the North Sea, in the early eighth century, half a century before the maritime expansion of the Viking Age.