Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe
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One of the most significant changes in human history occurred during the period of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, when people switched from the hunter-gatherer to the sedentary way of life and farming. This process is called Neolithic Demographic Transition, and it had substantial impact on human biology and dietary habits. The territory of the central Balkan and southern part of Great Pannonian Plane represents one of the key areas for studying the process of Neolitisation since is located at the crossroad between the Near East and central Europe. The rhytm and spread of Neolithisation in this region and how descendants of last hunter gatherers living in river enviroments accepted this new way of life and novel food resources is a hotly debated topic. Dental microwear analyses provide insights into the food abrasiveness as novel approach for understanding and delineate dietary changes among human populations. Different food types contain phytoliths; fish skin contains other sili...ca-based particulates, and ground flourstone gritty contaminants, which all can leave microscopic traces on non-occlusal enamel surfaces during food chewing. The rich osteological collections from Early Neolithic sites (6200-5200 cal. BC) located across the Central Balkans and southern part of Great Pannonian Plain provides the opportunity to better understand the mechanisms of population’s adaptation to major ecological and socio-cultural changes, and to reconstruct regional subsistence variability by using dental microwear analysis. In this study, we present for the first time results of buccal microwear analysis of 50 individuals from 11 Early Neolithic sites. The results shed light on the physical and mechanical aspects of foods providing also new data about the spread and dynamics of Neolithisation process in this part of Europe.
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NeolithisationSource:
1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book, 2019, 127-128Publisher:
- Museu Marítim de Barcelona
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Arheologija / ArchaeologyTY - CONF AU - Marković, Jelena AU - Romero, Alejandro AU - Stefanović, Sofija PY - 2019 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6055 AB - One of the most significant changes in human history occurred during the period of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, when people switched from the hunter-gatherer to the sedentary way of life and farming. This process is called Neolithic Demographic Transition, and it had substantial impact on human biology and dietary habits. The territory of the central Balkan and southern part of Great Pannonian Plane represents one of the key areas for studying the process of Neolitisation since is located at the crossroad between the Near East and central Europe. The rhytm and spread of Neolithisation in this region and how descendants of last hunter gatherers living in river enviroments accepted this new way of life and novel food resources is a hotly debated topic. Dental microwear analyses provide insights into the food abrasiveness as novel approach for understanding and delineate dietary changes among human populations. Different food types contain phytoliths; fish skin contains other silica-based particulates, and ground flourstone gritty contaminants, which all can leave microscopic traces on non-occlusal enamel surfaces during food chewing. The rich osteological collections from Early Neolithic sites (6200-5200 cal. BC) located across the Central Balkans and southern part of Great Pannonian Plain provides the opportunity to better understand the mechanisms of population’s adaptation to major ecological and socio-cultural changes, and to reconstruct regional subsistence variability by using dental microwear analysis. In this study, we present for the first time results of buccal microwear analysis of 50 individuals from 11 Early Neolithic sites. The results shed light on the physical and mechanical aspects of foods providing also new data about the spread and dynamics of Neolithisation process in this part of Europe. PB - Museu Marítim de Barcelona C3 - 1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book T1 - Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe EP - 128 SP - 127 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6055 ER -
@conference{ author = "Marković, Jelena and Romero, Alejandro and Stefanović, Sofija", year = "2019", abstract = "One of the most significant changes in human history occurred during the period of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, when people switched from the hunter-gatherer to the sedentary way of life and farming. This process is called Neolithic Demographic Transition, and it had substantial impact on human biology and dietary habits. The territory of the central Balkan and southern part of Great Pannonian Plane represents one of the key areas for studying the process of Neolitisation since is located at the crossroad between the Near East and central Europe. The rhytm and spread of Neolithisation in this region and how descendants of last hunter gatherers living in river enviroments accepted this new way of life and novel food resources is a hotly debated topic. Dental microwear analyses provide insights into the food abrasiveness as novel approach for understanding and delineate dietary changes among human populations. Different food types contain phytoliths; fish skin contains other silica-based particulates, and ground flourstone gritty contaminants, which all can leave microscopic traces on non-occlusal enamel surfaces during food chewing. The rich osteological collections from Early Neolithic sites (6200-5200 cal. BC) located across the Central Balkans and southern part of Great Pannonian Plain provides the opportunity to better understand the mechanisms of population’s adaptation to major ecological and socio-cultural changes, and to reconstruct regional subsistence variability by using dental microwear analysis. In this study, we present for the first time results of buccal microwear analysis of 50 individuals from 11 Early Neolithic sites. The results shed light on the physical and mechanical aspects of foods providing also new data about the spread and dynamics of Neolithisation process in this part of Europe.", publisher = "Museu Marítim de Barcelona", journal = "1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book", title = "Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe", pages = "128-127", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6055" }
Marković, J., Romero, A.,& Stefanović, S.. (2019). Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe. in 1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book Museu Marítim de Barcelona., 127-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6055
Marković J, Romero A, Stefanović S. Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe. in 1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book. 2019;:127-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6055 .
Marković, Jelena, Romero, Alejandro, Stefanović, Sofija, "Dental buccal microwear and dietary strategies in the Early Neolithic of Southeast Europe" in 1st Conference on the Early Neolithic of Europe, 6-8. November 2019; Abstract book (2019):127-128, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_6055 .