Stable isotopic analysis of human and faunal remains from the Incipient Chulmun (Neolithic) shell midden site of Ando Island, Korea

K Choy, D An, MP Richards - Journal of Archaeological Science, 2012 - Elsevier
Journal of Archaeological Science, 2012Elsevier
We analyzed stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios of human and animal remains from
the Ando shell midden, South Korea. The Ando site is a rare Incipient Chulmun (Neolithic)
site (ca. 6000–5000 BC), which contains well-preserved human and animal bones in shell
mounds. The stable isotope results for humans (average δ13C=− 13.5±0.5‰ and δ15N=
15.2±0.5‰) indicate that Ando people in the Incipient Chulmun period strongly depended
on marine resources. There were no isotopic differences between humans of different sex …
We analyzed stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios of human and animal remains from the Ando shell midden, South Korea. The Ando site is a rare Incipient Chulmun (Neolithic) site (ca. 6000–5000 BC), which contains well-preserved human and animal bones in shell mounds. The stable isotope results for humans (average δ13C = −13.5 ± 0.5‰ and δ15N = 15.2 ± 0.5‰) indicate that Ando people in the Incipient Chulmun period strongly depended on marine resources. There were no isotopic differences between humans of different sex and age at this site. We compared our data with other previous published isotopic data from the Chulmun sites and found that the Ando people had similar isotope values to the southern Chulmun people (Tongsamdong and Daepo), but different isotopic ratios than the western Chulmun people (Daejukri and Konamri). These results indicate that marine foods were the main food resources in the southern coastal regions, but not in the western coastal regions in Chulmun Korea.
Elsevier
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