Projects per year
Abstract
Cremated human remains are commonly found in the archaeological records, especially in Europe during the Metal Ages and the Roman period. Due to the high temperatures reached during cremation (up to 1000°C), most biological information locked in the isotopic composition of different tissues is heavily altered or even destroyed. The recent demonstration that strontium isotope ratio (87Sr/86Sr) remained unaltered during cremation and was even very resistant to post-burial alterations (which is not the case of unburned bone), opened new possibility for palaeomobility studies of ancient populations that practices cremations as a funerary ritual. This paper summarizes the strontium isotopic data produced over the last decade which is then deposited on the open-access platform IsoArcH (https://isoarch.eu/) for any interested parties to use. It is the first time isotopic data on cremated remains is introduced in this database, significantly extending its impact on the scientific community.
Date made available | 2021 |
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Publisher | IsoArcH database |
Keywords
- Strontium isotope analyses
- Cremations
- Mobility
- Landscape use
Format
- Format
- ris
- xlsx
Projects
- 1 Active
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EU632: Landscape Use and Mobility In EuRopE - Bridging the gap between cremation and inhumation
1/02/21 → 31/01/26
Project: Fundamental
Research output
- 1 Article
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Strontium isotope analyses of archaeological cremated remains – new data and perspectives
Snoeck, C., Cheung, C., Griffith, J., James, H. & Salesse, K., Jun 2022, In: Data in Brief. 42, p. 1-8 8 p., 108115.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile9 Citations (Scopus)136 Downloads (Pure)