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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/37122
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Title: | Investigating diet of Nogarole Camponi ( Northern Italy) through carbon, nitrogen and sulfur isotope analysis of animal bone collagen |
Authors: | Davitashvili, Ana |
Advisors: | Tafuri, Mary Anne Soncin, Silvia |
Keywords: | Stable isotopes Paleodiet Bronze age Prehistory Italy |
Issue Date: | 2-Oct-2023 |
Publisher: | Universidade de Évora |
Abstract: | The archaeological site of Nogarole Camponi is located in Povegliano, south of the city of
Verona, Italy. The site consists of a small settlement dated to the beginning of the Middle
Bronze Age (2300 – 950 century BCE) and it is associated with the so-called Terramare culture.
In this period, intensive agriculture, husbandry, and pastoralism became central in the
subsistence of people living in northern Italy (from the southern slopes of the Alps to the
central-eastern Po valley). In particular, the exploitation of secondary products (e.g., milk,
wool) became predominant over primary products (e.g., meat), leading to important economic
and social changes.
Stable isotope analysis of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur of human and animal bone collagen has
been applied in the last decades to a variety of archaeological contexts for the reconstruction
of past dietary practices. The working principle consists in tracing back the isotopic signal of
the specimen analyzed to the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles in nature, which allows
discriminating between C3 and C4 plants, as well as producers from consumers and aquatic from
terrestrial environments.
Recently, scholars have been building up the evidence for diet in Bronze Age northern Italy
using stable isotope analysis, with a focus on humans. For example, the introduction and the
role of C4 plants (millets) have been outlined in some of these communities. However, the
animal assemblage has a marginal role in these studies, used merely as a proxy for the baseline
signal. Here we add new evidence for the animal diet in Bronze Age northern Italy by analyzing
cattle, sheep, goat, pig and dog remains from Nogarole Camponi, coupling the new data with
those previously published and available in the literature. By doing so, we provide a
reconstruction of the animal diet and link it back to the environment where they were raised,
discussing husbandry practices and consequently, the human diet and economy.
Furthermore we present here a database of zooarchaeological isotopic data, which might
contribute to better understanding patterns of consumption and environmental background
in Bronze Age Italy.
By studying the diet of domestic animals from Nogarole Camponi, together with that from
other sites of northern Italy, we explore the relationship between humans, the animals and
the environment in an important period of major social changes. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/37122 |
Type: | masterThesis |
Appears in Collections: | BIB - Formação Avançada - Teses de Mestrado
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