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Water consumption in Iron Age, Roman, and Early Medieval Croatia.

Abstract
Patterns of water consumption by past human populations are rarely considered, yet drinking behavior is socially mediated and access to water sources is often socially controlled. Oxygen isotope analysis of archeological human remains is commonly used to identify migrants in the archeological record, but it can also be used to consider water itself, as this technique documents water consumption rather than migration directly. Here, we report an oxygen isotope study of humans and animals from coastal regions of Croatia in the Iron Age, Roman, and Early Medieval periods. The results show that while faunal values have little diachronic variation, the human data vary through time, and there are wide ranges of values within each period. Our interpretation is that this is not solely a result of mobility, but that human behavior can and did lead to human oxygen isotope ratios that are different from that expected from consumption of local precipitation.
AuthorsE Lightfoot, M Slaus, T C O'Connell
JournalAmerican journal of physical anthropology (Am J Phys Anthropol) Vol. 154 Issue 4 Pg. 535-43 (Aug 2014) ISSN: 1096-8644 [Electronic] United States
PMID24888560 (Publication Type: Historical Article, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Copyright© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Chemical References
  • Oxygen Isotopes
Topics
  • Animals
  • Croatia (ethnology)
  • Diet (ethnology, history)
  • Drinking (ethnology)
  • History, Ancient
  • History, Medieval
  • Humans
  • Oxygen Isotopes (analysis)
  • Tooth (chemistry)
  • Water Supply (history)

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