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Article
Copper and Barium as Dietary Discriminants: the Effects of Diagenesis
Archaeometry
  • J B Lambert
  • S V Simpson
  • Carole B Szpunar, Loyola University Chicago
  • J E Buikstra
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1984
Pages
131-138
Publisher Name
University of Oxford
Disciplines
Abstract

In skeletons excavated from Woodland sites, copper and barium levels are found to have been contaminated by influx from the soil environment. Electron microprobe scans for both elements show build-up along the outer surface of femur cross sections. Elemental levels for Cu and Ba are lower in the femur or fibula than in the more porous rib. The distribution of Cu in the immediately surrounding soil is highly anisotropic. These observations indicate that Cu and Ba should not be used for dietary inferences about ancient populations without independent evidence that diagenesis is not important.

Comments

Author Posting. © University of Oxford, 1984. This article is posted here by permission of the University of Oxford for personal use, not for redistribution. The article was published in Archaeometry, Volume 26, Issue 2, 1984.

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
Citation Information
Lambert, JB, SV Simpson, CB Szpunar, and JE Buikstra. "Copper and Barium as Dietary Discriminants: the Effects of Diagenesis." Archaeometry 26(2), 1984.