2010
DOI: 10.1017/s0033822200045665
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Dietary Habits and Freshwater Reservoir Effects in Bones from a Neolithic NE German Cemetery

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Within a project on Stone Age sites of NE Germany, 26 burials from the Ostorf cemetery and some further Neolithic sites have been analyzed by more than 40 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates. We here present the results of stable isotope and radiocarbon measurements together with reference 14

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Cited by 75 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…The youngest samples have almost terrestrial δ 13 C values. This relation seems to be typical of water bodies in regions with developed soils, and it was already indicated many decades ago: Aquatic plants and organic lake mud have been measured to have δ 13 C values down to -30 [3], and fish that spent at least part of their live in freshwater systems were found to have δ 13 C values significantly more negative than marine fish [66].…”
Section: Aquatic Animalsmentioning
confidence: 67%
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“…The youngest samples have almost terrestrial δ 13 C values. This relation seems to be typical of water bodies in regions with developed soils, and it was already indicated many decades ago: Aquatic plants and organic lake mud have been measured to have δ 13 C values down to -30 [3], and fish that spent at least part of their live in freshwater systems were found to have δ 13 C values significantly more negative than marine fish [66].…”
Section: Aquatic Animalsmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Measurements of the stable carbon isotope ratio, 13 C/ 12 C, are essential for normalising 14 C-measurements. Furthermore, they provide information about the origin of a sample.…”
Section: Stable Carbon Isotope Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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