Compound-specific stable carbon isotopic detection of pig product processing in British Late Neolithic pottery
暂无分享,去创建一个
Anna J. Mukherjee | R. Evershed | R. Berstan | A. Gibson | Mark S. Copley | M. Copley | A. J. Mukherjee
[1] Anna J. Mukherjee,et al. Processing of milk products in pottery vessels through British prehistory , 2005, Antiquity.
[2] Matthew Collins,et al. Did the first farmers of central and eastern Europe produce dairy foods? , 2005, Antiquity.
[3] R. Evershed,et al. Gas chromatographic, mass spectrometric and stable carbon isotopic investigations of organic residues of plant oils and animal fats employed as illuminants in archaeological lamps from Egypt. , 2005, The Analyst.
[4] R. Evershed,et al. Dairying in antiquity. I. Evidence from absorbed lipid residues dating to the British Iron Age , 2005 .
[5] Sebastian Payne,et al. Dairying in antiquity. III. Evidence from absorbed lipid residues dating to the British Neolithic , 2005 .
[6] E. Matisoo-Smith,et al. Worldwide Phylogeography of Wild Boar Reveals Multiple Centers of Pig Domestication , 2005, Science.
[7] R. Evershed,et al. Direct detection of maize in pottery residues via compound specific stable carbon isotope analysis , 2004, Antiquity.
[8] R. Evershed,et al. Thermally produced ω-(o-alkylphenyl)alkanoic acids provide evidence for the processing of marine products in archaeological pottery vessels , 2004 .
[9] Anna J. Mukherjee,et al. Direct chemical evidence for widespread dairying in prehistoric Britain , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[10] R. Evershed,et al. Identification of animal fats via compound specific δ13C values of individual fatty acids: assessments of results for reference fats and lipid extracts of archaeological pottery vessels , 2002 .
[11] Rowan K. Flad,et al. Pig domestication in ancient China , 2002, Antiquity.
[12] M. Waelkens,et al. Mass spectrometric methods prove the use of beeswax and ruminant fat in late Roman cooking pots. , 2002, Journal of chromatography. A.
[13] R. Evershed,et al. Chemistry of archaeological animal fats. , 2002, Accounts of chemical research.
[14] M. Waelkens,et al. Analysis of oil used in late Roman oil lamps with different mass spectrometric techniques revealed the presence of predominantly olive oil together with traces of animal fat. , 2001, Journal of chromatography. A.
[15] Mark Horton,et al. Processing palm fruits in the Nile Valley — biomolecular evidence from Qasr Ibrim , 2001, Antiquity.
[16] R. Evershed,et al. Detection of palm fruit lipids in archaeological pottery from Qasr Ibrim, Egyptian Nubia , 2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[17] E. Giuffra,et al. The origin of the domestic pig: independent domestication and subsequent introgression. , 2000, Genetics.
[18] R. Evershed,et al. Evidence for Varying Patterns of Exploitation of Animal Products in Different Prehistoric Pottery Traditions Based on Lipids Preserved in Surface and Absorbed Residues , 1999 .
[19] R. Evershed,et al. New chromatographic, mass spectrometric and stable isotope approaches to the classification of degraded animal fats preserved in archaeological pottery , 1999 .
[20] R. Evershed,et al. Lipids as carriers of anthropogenic signals from prehistory , 1999 .
[21] Evershed,et al. Direct demonstration of milk as an element of archaeological economies , 1998, Science.
[22] R. Evershed,et al. New Criteria for the Identification of Animal Fats Preserved in Archaeological Pottery , 1997, Naturwissenschaften.
[23] R. Evershed,et al. Detection of Vegetable Oil Adulteration Using Gas Chromatography Combustion/Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry , 1995 .
[24] R. Evershed,et al. Evidence for the mixing of fats and waxes in archaeological ceramics , 1995 .
[25] Mike Fletcher,et al. Digging Numbers: Elementary Statistics for Archaeologists , 1994 .
[26] R. Evershed,et al. Identification of an adhesive used to repair a Roman jar , 1993 .
[27] R. Evershed,et al. Epicuticular wax components preserved in potsherds as chemical indicators of leafy vegetables in ancient diets , 1991, Antiquity.
[28] R. Skeates,et al. Sacred and Profane , 1991 .
[29] Curt W. Beck,et al. Residues and Linings in Ancient Mediterranean Transport Amphoras , 1989 .
[30] Andrew Sherratt,et al. Foragers and Farmers: Population Interaction and Agricultural Expansion in Prehistoric Europe , 1988 .
[31] H. Friedli,et al. Ice core record of the 13C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2 in the past two centuries , 1986, Nature.
[32] J. Schibler,et al. Chemical analyses of organic residues in archaeological pottery from Arbon Bleiche 3, Switzerland – evidence for dairying in the late Neolithic , 2006 .
[33] M. Pearson,et al. The identification of prehistoric dairying activities in the Western Isles of Scotland: An integrated biomolecular approach , 2005 .
[34] M. Pearson. Food, culture and identity in the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age , 2003 .
[35] Julian Thomas. In the Kinship of Cows: the Social Centrality of Cattle in the Earlier Neolithic of Southern Britain , 2003 .
[36] U. Albarella,et al. A passion for pork: meat consumption at the British late Neolithic site of Durrington Walls , 2002 .
[37] P. Miracle,et al. Consuming passions and patterns of consumption , 2002 .
[38] E. Ciliberto,et al. Modern analytical methods in art and archaeology , 2000 .
[39] S. Dudd. Molecular and isotopic characterisation of animal fats in archaeological pottery , 1999 .
[40] Julian Thomas,et al. Understanding The Neolithic , 1999 .
[41] R. Evershed,et al. Simulation experiments for determining the use of ancient pottery vessels: the behaviour of epicuticular leaf wax during boiling of a leafy vegetable , 1997 .
[42] R. Evershed,et al. Application of isotope ratio monitoring gas chromatography–mass spectrometry to the analysis of organic residues of archaeological origin , 1994 .
[43] R. Evershed,et al. The survival of food residues: new methods of analysis, interpretation and application , 1992 .
[44] J. Pritchard,et al. Analysis of oilseeds, fats and fatty foods. , 1991 .
[45] Carl Heron,et al. Analysis of organic residues of archaeological origin by high-temperature gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry , 1990 .
[46] A. Gibson. Neolithic and early Bronze Age pottery , 1986 .
[47] I. Mason. Evolution of domesticated animals. , 1984 .
[48] M. Bell,et al. Archaeological aspects of woodland ecology , 1982 .
[49] M. Tooley,et al. The Environment in British prehistory , 1981 .
[50] G. J. Wainwright,et al. Durrington Walls : excavations, 1966-1968 , 1971 .