Palaeodiet and beyond: stable isotopes in bioarchaeology

scholarly article by Amy Bogaard published in August 2013

Palaeodiet and beyond: stable isotopes in bioarchaeology is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1080/00438243.2013.829272

P50authorAmy BogaardQ40901461
Alan OutramQ43771984
P2860cites workThe diet-body offset in human nitrogen isotopic values: a controlled dietary studyQ28714387
Introduction to experimental archaeologyQ43782157
Stable nitrogen isotope ratios of bone collagen reflect marine and terrestrial components of prehistoric human dietQ47575785
13C evidence for dietary habits of prehistoric man in DenmarkQ47602548
Experimental approaches to the interpretation of absorbed organic residues in archaeological ceramicsQ57753128
Patterns of pastoralism in later Bronze Age Kazakhstan: new evidence from faunal and lipid residue analysesQ57936422
P433issue3
P921main subjectarchaeologyQ23498
stable isotopeQ878130
bioarchaeologyQ13404081
P1104number of pages5
P304page(s)333-337
P577publication date2013-08-01
P1433published inWorld ArchaeologyQ8035362
P1476titlePalaeodiet and beyond: stable isotopes in bioarchaeology
P478volume45

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q111597607Leprosy in medieval Denmark: Exploring life histories through a multi‐tissue and multi‐isotopic approach
Q113296506Novel isotopic approaches to investigating human palaeoecology: An introduction
Q38874438Shifting diet, shifting culture? A bioarchaeological approach to island dietary development on Iron-Age Öland, Baltic Sea.
Q40228355Stable isotopes (carbon, nitrogen, sulfur), diet, and anthropometry in urban Colombian women: investigating socioeconomic differences