Isotopic evidence of Bronze Age diet and subsistence practices in the southeastern Carpathian Bend area, Romania
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Aguraiuja, Ülle
Abstract
Human and faunal osteological material from the southeastern Carpathian Bend area,
Romania, was analysed for δ13C, δ15N and δ34S to reconstruct the dietary practices of
the Middle Bronze Age Monteoru culture. As a secondary objective, the extent of
intraskeletal variation in stable isotope values was investigated by comparing skeletal
elements with differing collagen turnover rates. The intraskeletal isotope results
revealed a pattern where cortical bone samples produced statistically lower δ13C values
compared to trabecular bone samples, highlighting the necessity for more systematic
research to understand how stable isotopes are incorporated into bone collagen of
various skeletal elements. Diet in the Monteoru culture was shown to be exclusively
or predominantly terrestrial in origin with no detectable input of C4 or marine
resources. Differences in average δ13C and δ15N values between the two sites included
in the study (representing distinct phases of the culture) suggest a shift in dietary
preferences from a more meat-based economy to a more dairy- and plant-based
economy. The dissimilar contribution of animal foods to overall diet between the two
sites was supported by estimates generated by the Bayesian mixing model FRUITS,
which also showed that in both sites plant foods accounted for most of the calories
consumed. The faunal isotopic data contained a few outliers, suggestive of deliberate
movement of livestock, either through long-distance herding or trade. A combined
approach using juvenile bone collagen and incrementally sectioned tooth dentine from
adults demonstrates that the duration of breastfeeding varied between individuals, but
that there were no significant differences in weaning practices between survivors and
non-survivors. Sulphur isotopes reflect a population that was relatively homogeneous
in its isotopic composition and local in origin, except for the presence of two possible
migrants. The δ13C and δ15N data from the Carpathian Bend are comparable to those
from contemporaneous sites in coastal and inland Greece and Croatia, suggesting a
broad uniformity in Bronze Age dietary practices across Southeast Europe. As the first
major stable isotope study conducted on osteological material from the Romanian Sub-
Carpathians, this thesis provides new insights into the lives of these communities,
expands our knowledge of Bronze Age subsistence strategies in Southeast Europe, and
establishes a foundation for further isotopic investigations in the region.
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