Now showing items 1-2 of 2

    • Human-environment interactions in the Mesolithic – The case of site Paliwodzizna 29, a lakeside site in central Poland 

      Osipowicz, Grzegorz; Badura, Monika; Brown, Antony Gavin; Hudson, Samuel M.; Jankowski, Michał; Makowiecki, Daniel; Noryśkiewicz, Agnieszka M.; Orłowska, Justyna; Sykuła, Marcin; Weckwerth, Piotr (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-11-10)
      Human-environmental relations before agriculture can be revealed at archaeological sites through multi-method palaeoenvironmental studies, particularly at sites which have both dryland and wetland areas. Paliwodzizna 29 is such as site, being a series of pits and hearths at the edge of Lake Grodno in Central Poland. A combination of faunal analysis, lithostratigraphy, pollen, diaspores, charcoal and ...
    • Stable isotope evidence for late Medieval (14th-15th C) origins of the eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) fishery 

      Orton, David; Makowiecki, Daniel; de Roo, Tessa; Johnstone, Cluny; Harland, Jennifer; Jonsson, Leif; Heinrich, Dirk; Enghoff, Inge Bødker; Lougas, Lembi; Van Neer, Wim; Ervynck, Anton; Hufthammer, Anne Karin; Amundsen, Colin; Jones, Andrew K. G.; Locker, Alison; Hamilton-Dyer, Sheila; Pope, Peter; MacKenzie, Brian R.; Richards, Michael; O'Connell, Tamsin C.; Barrett, James H (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2011-11-16)
      Although recent historical ecology studies have extended quantitative knowledge of eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) exploitation back as far as the 16th century, the historical origin of the modern fishery remains obscure. Widespread archaeological evidence for cod consumption around the eastern Baltic littoral emerges around the 13th century, three centuries before systematic documentation, but ...