意大利庞贝古城饮食变化的稳定碳氮同位素证据

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
F. Pate, R. Henneberg, M. Henneberg
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引用次数: 16

摘要

稳定的碳和氮同位素结果提出了样本的人类和动物的骨头和食物遗骸从庞贝出土。这些保存完好的有机遗迹为研究公元79年维苏威火山爆发前后罗马城市的古代生活方式提供了宝贵的资源。同位素结果表明,人类饮食与考古和文献证据一致,庞贝城所有居民的饮食摄入多样化,包括一系列谷物、水果、蔬菜、海鲜以及家畜和野生动物的肉类。雄性的动物蛋白摄入量与雌性相似,但它们摄入的海产品量明显高于雌性。同位素数据表明,男性和女性之间的饮食差异很大,这表明过去存在着基于社会角色和/或社会阶层的饮食差异。与该地区的其他同位素研究相比,庞贝的人类饮食与丹麦农民和意大利南部沿海希腊殖民地(Metaponto)的饮食相似,但包括更多的海洋蛋白质。家畜的碳同位素值表明以c3为基础的陆生饮食,而氮同位素值区分了食草动物、杂食动物和食肉动物。
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STABLE CARBON AND NITROGEN ISOTOPE EVIDENCE FOR DIETARY VARIABILITY AT ANCIENT POMPEII, ITALY
Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope results are presented for a sample of human and faunal bones and food remains excavated from Pompeii. The well-preserved organic remains provide a valuable resource to examine ancient lifeways associated with a Roman city during a distinct period of time associated with the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79. Isotopic results indicate human diets that are consistent with the archaeological and documentary evidence for diverse dietary intake for all residents of Pompeii consisting of a range of cereals, fruits, vegetables, seafood, and meat from domestic and wild animals. Males had similar animal protein intakes to those of females, but they ingested significantly greater amounts of seafood than females. The great range of dietary variability among and between males and females indicated by the isotopic data suggests the existence of past dietary distinctions based on social role and/or social class. In comparison to other isotopic studies in the region, human diets at Pompeii are similar to those of Danish farmers and coastal Greek colonies in southern Italy (Metaponto) but included greater amounts of marine protein. Carbon isotope values for domestic animals indicate a C3-based terrestrial diet, while nitrogen isotope values distinguish herbivores from omnivores and carnivores.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry (MAA) is an Open Access Journal that covers the following interdisciplinary topics: 1. Natural Sciences applied to Archaeology (Archaeometry): Methods and Techniques of Dating, Analysis, Provenance, Archaeogeophysical surveys and Remote Sensing, Geochemical surveys, Statistics, Artifact and Conservation studies, Ancient Astronomy of both the Old and New Worlds, all applied to Archaeology, History of Art, and in general the Hominid Biological and Cultural evolution. 2. Biomolecular Archaeology. 3. Environmental Archaeology. 4. Osteoarchaeology. 5. Digital Archaeology. 6. Palaeo-climatological/geographical/ecological impact on ancient humans. 7. STEMAC (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics in Art and Culture). 8. Reports on Early Science and Ancient Technology. 9. Special Issues on Archaeology and Archaeometry. 10. Palaeolithic, Prehistoric, Classical, Hellenistic, Roman, Protochristian, Byzantine, Etruscan periods, and Megalithic cultures in the Mediterranean region. 11. Egyptian and Middle Eastern Archaeology. 12. Biblical Archaeology. 13. Early Arab cultures. 14. Ethnoarchaeology. 15. Theoretical and Experimental Archaeology. 16. Mythology and Archaeology. 17. Archaeology and International Law. 18. Cultural Heritage Management. 19. Completed Excavation Reports. 20. Archaeology and the Origins of Writing. 21. Cultural interactions of the ancient Mediterraneans with people further inland.
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