Food Has No Borders

R. Quinn, Helen Alesbury, Ligia Ceja, A. Soler, L. Godfrey
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Abstract

Isotopic analyses of human remains augment the biological profile with geolocation and dietary information, furthering efforts to identify unknown individuals from a forensic context. Here we test the methodological resolution of geolocation (δ18O, 87Sr/86Sr) and dietary (δ13C, δ15N) isotopes of one identified individual who immigrated to New York City from St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG), Lesser Antilles. Isotope-based geolocation estimates did not identify the childhood residency on SVG, but did point to New York City as a possible residence during early adulthood. The individual’s C3-based diet did not significantly change from childhood to early adulthood, illustrating the maintenance of food traditions after the immigration event. This study illustrates that further development of tissue-specific isoscapes incorporating bioavailable foods, drinking water, and cultural traditions is warranted to refine methodological resolution of isotopic applications in forensic anthropology.
食物无国界
人类遗骸的同位素分析增加了地理位置和饮食信息的生物特征,进一步努力从法医环境中识别未知个体。在这里,我们测试了一名从小安的列斯群岛圣文森特和格林纳丁斯(SVG)移民到纽约市的确定个体的地理位置(δ18O, 87Sr/86Sr)和饮食(δ13C, δ15N)同位素的方法分辨率。基于同位素的地理位置估计没有确定SVG上的童年居住地,但确实指出纽约市可能是成年早期的居住地。从童年到成年早期,个体的c3基础饮食没有显著变化,说明移民事件后食物传统的维持。这项研究表明,进一步发展组织特异性同位素,包括生物可利用的食物、饮用水和文化传统,有必要完善法医人类学中同位素应用的方法解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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