Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers

The European Fallow deer (Dama dama dama) became extinct in the British Isles and most of continental Europe at the time of the Last Glacial Maximum, with the species becoming restricted to an Anatolian refugium (Masseti et al. 2008). Human-mediated reintroductions resulted in fallow populations in...

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Main Author: Osborne, David
Format: Article
Published: Ubiquity Press 2017
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39598/
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author Osborne, David
author_facet Osborne, David
author_sort Osborne, David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The European Fallow deer (Dama dama dama) became extinct in the British Isles and most of continental Europe at the time of the Last Glacial Maximum, with the species becoming restricted to an Anatolian refugium (Masseti et al. 2008). Human-mediated reintroductions resulted in fallow populations in Rhodes, Sicily, Mallorca, Iberia and other parts of western Europe (Sykes et al. 2013). Eventually, the species was brought to Britain by the Romans during the 1st century AD, with a breeding population being established at Fishbourne Roman Palace (Sykes et al. 2011). The human influence on the present-day distribution of the species makes it particularly interesting from a zooarchaeological perspective. This paper describes my MSc research, as part of the AHRC-funded project Dama International: Fallow Deer and European Society 6000 BC–AD 1600, looking at antlers from Iron Age and Roman sites in Britain for evidence of trade in body parts and whether this can be elucidated by a parallel stable isotope study of modern fallow antlers of known provenance.
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spelling nottingham-395982020-05-04T18:38:13Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39598/ Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers Osborne, David The European Fallow deer (Dama dama dama) became extinct in the British Isles and most of continental Europe at the time of the Last Glacial Maximum, with the species becoming restricted to an Anatolian refugium (Masseti et al. 2008). Human-mediated reintroductions resulted in fallow populations in Rhodes, Sicily, Mallorca, Iberia and other parts of western Europe (Sykes et al. 2013). Eventually, the species was brought to Britain by the Romans during the 1st century AD, with a breeding population being established at Fishbourne Roman Palace (Sykes et al. 2011). The human influence on the present-day distribution of the species makes it particularly interesting from a zooarchaeological perspective. This paper describes my MSc research, as part of the AHRC-funded project Dama International: Fallow Deer and European Society 6000 BC–AD 1600, looking at antlers from Iron Age and Roman sites in Britain for evidence of trade in body parts and whether this can be elucidated by a parallel stable isotope study of modern fallow antlers of known provenance. Ubiquity Press 2017-03-16 Article PeerReviewed Osborne, David (2017) Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology, 27 (1). 10/1-10/15. ISSN 2041-9015 Stable isotope analysis http://www.pia-journal.co.uk/articles/10.5334/pia-482/ doi:10.5334/pia-482 doi:10.5334/pia-482
spellingShingle Stable isotope analysis
Osborne, David
Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title_full Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title_fullStr Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title_full_unstemmed Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title_short Imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting Iron Age and Roman trade in fallow deer antlers
title_sort imports and isotopes: a modern baseline study for interpreting iron age and roman trade in fallow deer antlers
topic Stable isotope analysis
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39598/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39598/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39598/