What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day

“The past is key to assessing the nature and scale of our impacts today” (Boivin and Crowther 2021: 273) Over the last two decades, archaeological studies have examined lead pollution levels in stratified environmental archives from the Neolithic onwards, to understand the past impacts of human act...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fear, Catrin
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80615/
_version_ 1848801258493706240
author Fear, Catrin
author_facet Fear, Catrin
author_sort Fear, Catrin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description “The past is key to assessing the nature and scale of our impacts today” (Boivin and Crowther 2021: 273) Over the last two decades, archaeological studies have examined lead pollution levels in stratified environmental archives from the Neolithic onwards, to understand the past impacts of human activities. Lead is a trace metal whose natural cycles have been heavily affected by anthropogenic activities. As a result, lead pollution has been used to trace anthropogenic activities, and to understand the onset of the Anthropocene. However, lead is also present in human skeletal remains, and is a time-transgressive archive reflecting contaminant exposure (López-Costas et al. 2020). This thesis has examined the development and impact of lead on human populations across the last two millennia, producing the first assessment of the historic uptake of lead pollution by the human population across Britain. From this, a date-range for the onset of the Anthropocene has been suggested, based on the point at which lead in the human population reaches concerning levels. This thesis is the first to use lead from a human bioarchaeological perspective to question what is currently considered a ‘safe’ Blood Lead Level (BLL), as well as the ratios for understanding BLL in archaeological remains.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T21:04:36Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-80615
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T21:04:36Z
publishDate 2025
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-806152025-07-28T04:40:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80615/ What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day Fear, Catrin “The past is key to assessing the nature and scale of our impacts today” (Boivin and Crowther 2021: 273) Over the last two decades, archaeological studies have examined lead pollution levels in stratified environmental archives from the Neolithic onwards, to understand the past impacts of human activities. Lead is a trace metal whose natural cycles have been heavily affected by anthropogenic activities. As a result, lead pollution has been used to trace anthropogenic activities, and to understand the onset of the Anthropocene. However, lead is also present in human skeletal remains, and is a time-transgressive archive reflecting contaminant exposure (López-Costas et al. 2020). This thesis has examined the development and impact of lead on human populations across the last two millennia, producing the first assessment of the historic uptake of lead pollution by the human population across Britain. From this, a date-range for the onset of the Anthropocene has been suggested, based on the point at which lead in the human population reaches concerning levels. This thesis is the first to use lead from a human bioarchaeological perspective to question what is currently considered a ‘safe’ Blood Lead Level (BLL), as well as the ratios for understanding BLL in archaeological remains. 2025-07-28 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80615/1/Fear%2C%20Catrin%2C%2014342339%2C%20Corrections.pdf Fear, Catrin (2025) What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. bioarchaeology blood lead level pb ingestion archaeology britain lead exposure lead pollution lead mining
spellingShingle bioarchaeology
blood lead level
pb ingestion
archaeology
britain
lead exposure
lead pollution
lead mining
Fear, Catrin
What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title_full What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title_fullStr What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title_full_unstemmed What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title_short What’s your poison?: identifying Pb ingestion and its effects from the Neolithic to modern day
title_sort what’s your poison?: identifying pb ingestion and its effects from the neolithic to modern day
topic bioarchaeology
blood lead level
pb ingestion
archaeology
britain
lead exposure
lead pollution
lead mining
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80615/