2021
DOI: 10.1002/oa.3069
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Jordanian migration and mobility in the Middle Bronze Age (ca. 2100–1550 BCE) at Pella

Abstract: The site of Pella, located in the foothills of the east Jordan valley, was a prosperous city–state throughout the Middle Bronze Age (MBA, ca. 2000–1500 BCE). As part of a widespread trading network, Pella enjoyed extensive socio‐economic relationships with Egypt, Cyprus, and the Aegean, Anatolia, and Babylonia during this period. We report isotopic analysis (87Sr/86Sr, δ18O, and δ13C) from enamel of 22 human permanent second molars of which 13 second lower molars were used for an additional biodistance analysi… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 102 publications
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“…More studies are exploring the impact of trade and interconnectivity to population structures in the Middle Levantine region (Elias, 2016; Haber et al, 2020; Maaranen et al, 2022; Mardini et al, 2023; Nassar, 2019). The Middle Bronze Age led to an increase and intensification within and between regions in the eastern Mediterranean, but responses were varying; some sites have provided evidence of an influx of migrants (Stantis et al, 2020; Stantis, Kharobi, Maaranen, Macpherson, Bietak, Prell, & Schutkowski, 2021), accompanied by the presence of diverse material culture (Bader, 2012), while in others, the expansion of the MBA trade network has not correlated with newcomers (Stantis, Maaranen, Kharobi, Nowell, Macpherson, Doumet‐Serhal, & Schutkowski, 2021; Stantis, Maaranen, Kharobi, Nowell, Macpherson, Schutkowski, & Bourke, 2021). Due to its continuous occupation and growing importance throughout the Bronze and Iron Age, Sidon provides key insights to the wider development of the region.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…More studies are exploring the impact of trade and interconnectivity to population structures in the Middle Levantine region (Elias, 2016; Haber et al, 2020; Maaranen et al, 2022; Mardini et al, 2023; Nassar, 2019). The Middle Bronze Age led to an increase and intensification within and between regions in the eastern Mediterranean, but responses were varying; some sites have provided evidence of an influx of migrants (Stantis et al, 2020; Stantis, Kharobi, Maaranen, Macpherson, Bietak, Prell, & Schutkowski, 2021), accompanied by the presence of diverse material culture (Bader, 2012), while in others, the expansion of the MBA trade network has not correlated with newcomers (Stantis, Maaranen, Kharobi, Nowell, Macpherson, Doumet‐Serhal, & Schutkowski, 2021; Stantis, Maaranen, Kharobi, Nowell, Macpherson, Schutkowski, & Bourke, 2021). Due to its continuous occupation and growing importance throughout the Bronze and Iron Age, Sidon provides key insights to the wider development of the region.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dental nonmetric traits were used as a proxy for genetic data; these hereditary features, visible on tooth cusps and roots, have been found to recreate population distances that are similar to DNA studies (Delgado et al, 2019; Hubbard et al, 2015; Rathmann & Reyes‐Centeno, 2020). Dental non‐metric traits have been used in various biodistance investigations, ranging from global (Hanihara, 2008; Scott & Dahlberg, 1982; Scott & Turner, 1997; Stojanowski & Schillaci, 2006) and regional (Coppa et al, 2007; Irish, 2005, 2006; Irish & Friedman, 2010; Parras, 2004; Ullinger et al, 2005) to intra‐site comparisons (Adams et al, 2020; Elias, 2016; Maaranen et al, 2021; Paul et al, 2013; Pilloud & Larsen, 2011; Prevedorou & Stojanowski, 2017; Rathmann et al, 2019; Stantis, Maaranen, Kharobi, Nowell, Macpherson, Schutkowski, & Bourke, 2021; Stojanowski, 2003; Stojanowski & Schillaci, 2006). In comparison, intra‐site (i.e., intra‐cemetery) analyses are not as common though they have much potential by providing insight into cemetery structures, post‐marital residency, biological kinship, temporal microchronology and phenotypic variability (Stojanowski & Schillaci, 2006).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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