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Isotopic evidence of human mobility and diet in a prehistoric/protohistoric Fijian coastal environment (c. 750–150 BP)
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Isotopic evidence of human mobility and diet in a prehistoric/protohistoric Fijian coastal environment (c. 750–150 BP)

Christina Stantis, Hallie R Buckley, Rebecca L Kinaston, Patrick Nunn, Klervia Jaouen and Michael P Richards
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Vol.159(3), pp.478-495
2016
url
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.22884View
Published Version

Abstract

Evolutionary Biology Biochemistry and Cell Biology Archaeology Fiji carbon isotope analysis nitrogen isotope analysis 87Sr/86Sr childhood diet
Objectives: Bourewa, on the southwest coast of Viti Levu in Fiji, is a multi-period site that contained burials dated to the later Vuda Phase (750-150 BP), a period of climatic fluctuations that potentially impacted the availability of food resources. We aim to investigate diet and movement at this site during a time of possible ecological pressure and political change. Materials and Methods: We analyzed δ13C, δ15N, and 87Sr/86Sr of these Vuda Phase individuals (n= 25) interred at the site. By analyzing dentin and bone, both childhood diet and the diet within the past few years of adults' lives were examined. Results: he paleodietary results suggested that adult diets consisted largely of low trophic level marine organisms. Dentin and bone isotopic values differed significantly: childhood diet involved consumption of more higher trophic level terrestrial foods. Most individuals displayed 87Sr/86Sr ratios expected of people living along a marine coastline. However, a few individuals displayed 87Sr/86Sr ratios and paleodietary values (δ13Cdentin, δ15Ndentin) suggestive of living further inland or consuming a more terrestrial-based childhood diet. Discussion: The results are compared with past studies of sites from Fiji and nearby archipelagoes, placing our interpretations into a wider regional context. The Bourewa community appears to have consumed more low trophic level marine foods than any nearby site, possibly because terrestrial foods were more difficult to acquire. Interpreting the childhood diet is challenging due to the paucity of ethnohistoric literature on Fijian childhood; small meals outside of communal mealtimes or feeding children terrestrial animal protein as a means of cultural buffering are potential explanations. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Anthropology
Evolutionary Biology
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