Diet and environemment in south-eastern Iberia during the Bronze Age, based on isotope analysis of human remains.

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Author
Molina González, Fernando
Nocete Calvo, Francisco
Delgado Huertas, Antonio
Cámara Serrano, Juan Antonio
Martínez Sánchez, Rafael M.
Jiménez Brobéil, Sylvia Alejandra
Miranda León, María Teresa
Riquelme Cantal, José Antonio
Spanedda, Liliana
Pérez Baeras, Cristóbal
Lizcano Prestel, Rafael
Nieto LIñán, José Miguel
Nájera Colino, Trinidad
Granados Torres, Arsenio
Carrión Méndez, Francisco
Publisher
Oxford University PressDate
2019Subject
Iberian PeninsulaArchaeological evidence
Archaeology
Bone
Bronze Age
Carbon isotope
Diet
Isotopic analysis
Nitrogen isotope
Paleoenvironment
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A large sample of human bones from a series of archaeological sites in the south-eastern Iberian Peninsula was selected for δ13C and δ15N stable isotope analysis. Except for some contrast samples, the remains date from the first half of the second millennium cal BC and are ascribed to the Argar Culture, which developed during the Bronze Age in south-eastern Iberia. Most authors have considered that this region reached a high degree of social hierarchical organization at this time, as demonstrated by the funerary record, both with regard to the grave goods and to the evidence of physical effort and diseases on the human remains. Results of the isotope analysis revealed the existence of differences among the settlements studied, as well as differences over time within every settlement and among the various individuals tested. Some variances can be assigned to social classes/status and others are linked to chronological factors. In particular, changes in δ13C can be explained by the increasing aridity of the first half of the second millennium cal BC, although other causes can be put forward too