2,299
Views
25
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Milking the megafauna: Using organic residue analysis to understand early farming practice

&

References

  • Barrett, J. 2011. The Neolithic Revolution: an ecological perspective, pp. 66–89 in Hadjikoumis, A., Robinson, E. and Viner, S. (eds.), The Dynamics of Neolithisation in Europe: Studies in Honour of Andrew Sherratt. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Beglane, F. 2011. Appendix 10: Faunal Bone and Archaeolomalacological Analysis. A2 Maydown to City of Derry Airport Dualling Scheme Archaeological Excavation Final Report. Unpublished report for John Cronin & Associates for Roads Service Northern Division.
  • Bell, M. (ed.) 2007. Prehistoric Coastal Communities: The Mesolithic in Western Britain. Council for British Archaeology Research Report 149. York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Bergh, S. and Hensey, R. 2013. Unpicking the chronology of Carrowmore. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 32(4), 343–66.
  • Buckley, M., Kansa, S. W., Howard, S., Campbell, S., Thomas-Oates, J. and Collins, M. 2010. Distinguishing between archaeological sheep and goat bones using a single collagen peptide. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 13–20.
  • Brooks, A., Bradley, S. L., Edwards, R. J. and Goodwyn, N. 2011. The palaeogeography of Northwest Europe during the last 20,000 years. Journal of Maps 2011, 573–87.
  • Carden, R. F., McDevitt, A. D., Zachos, F. E., Woodman, P. C., O'Toole, P., Rose, H., Monaghan, N. T., Campana, M. G., Bradley, D. G. and Edwards, C. J. 2012. Phylogeographic, ancient DNA, fossil and morphometric analyses reveal ancient and modern human introductions of a large mammal: the complex case of red deer (Cervus elaphus) in Ireland. Quaternary Science Reviews 42, 74–84.
  • Case, H. 1969. Neolithic explanations. Antiquity 43, 176–86.
  • Caulfield, S., O’ Donnell, R. G. and Mitchell, P. I. 1998. Radiocarbon dating of a Neolithic field system at Céide Fields, County Mayo, Ireland. Radiocarbon 40, 629–40.
  • Cooney, G. 2000. Landscapes of Neolithic Ireland. London: Routledge.
  • Cooney, G., Bayliss, A., Healy, F., Whittle, A., Danaher, E., Cagney, L., Mallory, J., Smyth, J., Kador, T. and O'Sullivan, M. 2011. Chapter 12: Ireland, pp. 562–669 in Whittle, A., Healy, F. and Bayliss, A., Gathering Time: Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Copley, M. S., Berstan, R., Dudd, S. N., Docherty, G., Mukherjee, A. J., Straker, V., Payne, S. and Evershed, R. P. 2003. Direct chemical evidence for widespread dairying in prehistoric Britain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100(4), 1524–9.
  • Copley, M. S., Berstan, R., Dudd, S. N., Straker, V., Payne, S. and Evershed, R. P. 2005. Dairying in antiquity. III. Evidence from absorbed lipid residues dating to the British Neolithic. Journal of Archaeological Science 32, 523–46.
  • Craig, O. E., Steele, V. J., Fischer, A., Hartz, S., Andersen, S. H., Donohoe, P., Glykou, A., Saul, H., Jones, D. M., Koch, E. and Heron, C. P. 2011. Ancient lipids reveal continuity in culinary practices across the transition to agriculture in Northern Europe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108(44), 17910–15.
  • Cramp, L. J., Jones, J., Sheridan, A., Smyth, J., Whelton, H., Mulville, J., Sharples, N. and ….Evershed, R. P. 2014. Immediate replacement of fishing with dairying by the earliest farmers of the NE Atlantic archipelagos. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 281. doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.2372
  • Danaher, E. 2007. Monumental Beginnings: The Archaeology of the N4 Sligo Inner Relief Road. Dublin: National Roads Authority.
  • Dudd, S. N. and Evershed, R. P. 1998. Direct demonstration of milk as an element of archaeological economies. Science 282, 1478–81.
  • Dunne, J., Evershed, R. P., Salque, M., Cramp, L., Bruni, S., Ryan, K., Biagetti, S. and di Lernia, S. 2012. First dairying in green Saharan Africa in the fifth millennium BC. Nature 486(7403), 390–4.
  • Evershed, R. P. 2008. Experimental approaches to the interpretation of absorbed organic residues in archaeological ceramics. World Archaeology 40, 26–47.
  • Evershed, R. P., Payne, S., Sherratt, A. G., Copley, M. S., Coolidge, J., Urem-Kotsu, D., Kotsakis, K., Ozdogan, M., Ozdogan, A. E., Nieuwenhuyse, O., Akkermans, P. M. M. G., Bailey, D., Andeescu, R.-R., Campbell, S., Farid, S., Hodder, I., Yalman, N., Ozbasaran, M., Bicakci, E., Garfinkel, Y., Levy, T. and Burton, M. M. 2008. Earliest date for milk use in the Near East and southeastern Europe linked to cattle herding. Nature 455(7212), 528–31.
  • Friedli, H., Loetscher, H., Oeschger, H., Siegenthaler, U. and Stauffer, B. 1986. Ice core record of the 13C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2 in the past two centuries. Nature 324, 237–8.
  • Garrow, D. and Sturt, F. 2011. Grey waters bright with Neolithic argonauts? Maritime connections and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition within the ‘western seaways’ of Britain, c. 5000–3500 BC. Antiquity 85(327), 59–72.
  • Hill, G. 1877. Facts from Gweedore (5th edition). London: Hatchards.
  • Hodder, I. 2012. Entangled: An Archaeology of the Relationships between Humans and Things. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Legge, A. J. 2008. Livestock and Neolithic society at Hambledon Hill, pp. 536–86 in Mercer, R. and Healy, F. (eds.), Hambledon Hill, Dorset: Excavation and Survey of a Neolithic Monument Complex and its Surrounding Landscape. Swindon: English Heritage.
  • Lucas, A. T. 1960. Irish food before the potato. Gwerin 3, 8–43.
  • Mallory, J. P., Nelis, E. and Hartwell, B. 2011. Excavations on Donegore Hill, Co. Antrim. Dublin: Wordwell.
  • McClatchie, M., Bogaard, A., Colledge, S., Whitehouse, N. J., Schulting, R. J., Barratt, P. and McLaughlin, T. R. 2014. Neolithic farming in north-western Europe: archaeobotanical evidence from Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science. 51, 206–215.
  • McCormick, F. 2007. Mammal bone studies from prehistoric Irish sites, pp. 77–101 in Murphy, E. M. and Whitehouse, N. J. (eds.), Environmental Archaeology in Ireland. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • McSparron, C. 2008. Have you no homes to go to? Neolithic housing. Archaeology Ireland 22, 18–21.
  • Mukherjee, A. 2004. The Importance of Pigs in the later British Neolithic: Integrating Stable Isotope Evidence from Lipid Residues in Archaeological Potsherds, Animal Bone, and Modern Animal Tissues. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Bristol.
  • Mukherjee, A., Gibson, A. and Evershed, R. 2008. Trends in pig product processing at British Neolithic Grooved Ware sites traced through organic residues in potsherds. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 2059–73.
  • Murray, H. K., Murray, J. C. and Fraser, S. M. 2009. A Tale of Unknown Unknowns: A Mesolithic Pit Alignment and a Neolithic Timber Hall at Warren Field, Crathes, Aberdeenshire. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Rieley, G. 1994. Derivatization of organic-compounds prior to gas-chromatographic combustion-isotope ratio mass-spectrometric analysis – identification of isotope fractionation processes. Analyst 119, 915–19.
  • Schulting, R. J. 2013. On the northwestern fringes: earlier Neolithic subsistence in Britain and Ireland as seen through faunal remains and stable isotopes, pp. 313–38 in Colledge, S., Conolly, J., Dobney, K., Manning, K. and Shennan, S. (eds.), The Origins and Spread of Stock-Keeping in the Near East and Europe. Walnut Creek, California: Left Coast Press.
  • Schulting, R. J., Murphy, E., Jones, C. and Warren, G. 2012. New dates from the north and a proposed chronology for Irish court tombs. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 112C, 1–60.
  • Sheridan, J. A. 1991. Pottery production in Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Ireland: a petrological and chemical study, pp. 305–35 in Middleton, A. and Freestone, I. (eds.), Recent Developments in Ceramic Petrology. London: British Museum Occasional Paper 81.
  • Sheridan, J. A. 1995. Irish Neolithic pottery: the story in 1995, pp. 3–12 in Kinnes, I. and Varndell, G. (eds.), ‘Unbaked Urns of Rudely Shape’: Essays on British and Irish Pottery for Ian Longworth. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Sheridan, J. A. 2003. French Connections I: Spreading the marmites thinly, pp. 3–17 in Armit, I., Murphy, E., Nelis, E. and Simpson, D. D. A. (eds.), Neolithic Settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Sheridan, J. A. 2010. The Neolithisation of Britain and Ireland: the ‘big picture’, pp. 89–105 in Finlayson, B. and Warren, G. (eds.), Landscapes in Transition. Oxford and London: Oxbow Books and Council for British Research in the Levant.
  • Smyth, J. 2013. Tides of change? The house through the Irish Neolithic, pp. 301–27 in Hofmann, D. and Smyth, J. (eds.), Tracking the Neolithic House in Europe: Sedentism, Architecture and Practice. New York: Springer.
  • Smyth, J. 2014. Settlement in the Irish Neolithic: new discoveries at the edge of Europe. Oxford: Prehistoric Society/Oxbow Books.
  • Smyth, J. and Evershed, R. 2014. Pottery, archaeology and chemistry: contents and context, pp. 347–67 in Whittle, A. and Bickle, P. (eds.), Early Farmers: The View from Archaeology and Science. London: British Academy.
  • Smyth, J. and Evershed, R. accepted. The molecules of meals: new insight into Neolithic foodways. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 115C.
  • Tresset, A. 2003. French Connections II: of cows and men, pp. 18–30 in Armit, I., Murphy, E., Nelis, E. and Simpson, D. D. A. (eds.), Neolithic Settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Whitehouse, N. J., Schulting, R., McClatchie, M., Barratt, P., McLaughlin, T. R., Bogaard, A., Colledge, S., Marchant, R., Gaffrey, J. and Bunting, M. J. 2014. Neolithic agriculture on the European western frontier: the boom and bust of early farming in Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science. 51, 185–205.
  • Whittle, A., Healy, F. and Bayliss, A. 2011. Gathering Time: Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Woodman, P. and McCarthy, M. 2003. Contemplating some awful(ly interesting) vistas: importing cattle and red deer into prehistoric Ireland, pp. 31–9 in Armit, I., Murphy, E., Nelis, E. and Simpson, D. D. A. (eds.), Neolithic Settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Woodman, P., Anderson, E. and Finlay, N. 1999. Excavations at Ferriter's Cove, 1983–95: Last Foragers, First Farmers in the Dingle Peninsula. Bray: Wordwell.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.