‘Do dead men tell no tales?’ The geographic origin of a colonial period Anglican cemetery population in Adelaide, South Australia, determined by isotope analyses

IF 1.1 3区 历史学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
C. Adams, T. Owen, F. Pate, D. Bruce, Kristine E. Nielson, R. Klaebe, M. Henneberg, I. Moffat
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Tooth enamel and dentine samples from 13 individuals buried in the unmarked ‘free ground’ colonial section of St Mary’s Anglican Cemetery in Adelaide were analysed for oxygen and strontium isotopic composition to assist with the determination of their geographic origin. As the life history of these individuals is not well-documented in the historical record, isotopic data provide important information about migration and mobility in a colonial South Australian population. This was supplemented with further analysis of diet from previously published stable isotope data. While the results are somewhat ambiguous, they suggest that of the 13 individuals in this study, one was probably born in Adelaide, eight in Britain/Ireland, three could have been born in either location; one was born elsewhere. This interpretation supplements and supports the results from the analysis of skeletal morphology, microbiomes, and historical records.
“死人不讲故事吗?”同位素分析确定了南澳大利亚阿德莱德殖民时期圣公会墓地人口的地理来源
研究人员分析了埋在阿德莱德圣玛丽圣公会公墓未标记的“自由地”殖民地部分的13个人的牙釉质和牙本质样本的氧和锶同位素组成,以帮助确定他们的地理来源。由于这些个体的生活史在历史记录中没有很好的记录,同位素数据提供了关于南澳大利亚殖民地人口迁移和流动的重要信息。根据先前发表的稳定同位素数据对饮食进行了进一步分析。虽然结果有些模糊,但他们表明,在这项研究的13个人中,1人可能出生在阿德莱德,8人出生在英国/爱尔兰,3人可能出生在这两个地方;一个是在别处出生的。这一解释补充并支持了骨骼形态学、微生物组和历史记录分析的结果。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
20
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