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Stable carbon isotopic assessment of prehistoric diets in the south-western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract

This thesis consists of a stable carbon isotopic assessment of the diets of the Holocene human inhabitants of the south-western Cape, South-Africa. Samples of the foods these people ate were collected from each of the four major physiographic zones in the area, and their /sup 13/C//sup 12/C ratios measured. A total of more than 200 such analyses enabled the estimation of the average delta /sup 13/C values of prehistoric human diets in each zone. This information is used to interpret delta /sup 13/C measurements on a series of archaeological human skeletons. The results are consistent with a model of prehistoric subsistence behaviour in which people living at the coast made intensive use of marine food resources throughout the Holocene, consuming such a large proportion of these foods that they must have spent much, if not all of their time at the coast. Inland skeletons reflect an almost entirely terrestrial diet. These results contradict hypotheses about seasonal population movements between the coast and the interior generated from excavated archaeological material. Considerable changes in many of our current views of the Late Stone Age of the south-western Cape will have to be made in order to accommodate these data.
Authors:
Publication Date:
Jan 01, 1984
Product Type:
Book
Reference Number:
AIX-16-079990; EDB-86-005803
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Thesis (M.Sc.). Contains loose maps on transparents
Subject:
58 GEOSCIENCES; FOOD; ISOTOPE DATING; MAN; DIET; SKELETON; ANTHROPOLOGY; ARCHAEOLOGY; CARBON 12; CARBON 13; DATA COMPILATION; ISOTOPE RATIO; SOUTH AFRICA; AFRICA; AGE ESTIMATION; ANIMALS; BODY; CARBON ISOTOPES; DATA; EVEN-EVEN NUCLEI; EVEN-ODD NUCLEI; INFORMATION; ISOTOPES; LIGHT NUCLEI; MAMMALS; NUCLEI; NUMERICAL DATA; ORGANS; PRIMATES; STABLE ISOTOPES; VERTEBRATES; 580100* - Geology & Hydrology- (-1989)
OSTI ID:
6430045
Research Organizations:
Cape Town Univ. (South Africa)
Country of Origin:
South Africa
Language:
English
Availability:
The Registrar, University of Cape Town, University Private Bag, Rondebosch, 7700, South Africa.
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
Pages: 219
Announcement Date:
May 13, 2001

Citation Formats

Sealy, J C. Stable carbon isotopic assessment of prehistoric diets in the south-western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa. South Africa: N. p., 1984. Web.
Sealy, J C. Stable carbon isotopic assessment of prehistoric diets in the south-western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa. South Africa.
Sealy, J C. 1984. "Stable carbon isotopic assessment of prehistoric diets in the south-western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa." South Africa.
@misc{etde_6430045,
title = {Stable carbon isotopic assessment of prehistoric diets in the south-western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa}
author = {Sealy, J C}
abstractNote = {This thesis consists of a stable carbon isotopic assessment of the diets of the Holocene human inhabitants of the south-western Cape, South-Africa. Samples of the foods these people ate were collected from each of the four major physiographic zones in the area, and their /sup 13/C//sup 12/C ratios measured. A total of more than 200 such analyses enabled the estimation of the average delta /sup 13/C values of prehistoric human diets in each zone. This information is used to interpret delta /sup 13/C measurements on a series of archaeological human skeletons. The results are consistent with a model of prehistoric subsistence behaviour in which people living at the coast made intensive use of marine food resources throughout the Holocene, consuming such a large proportion of these foods that they must have spent much, if not all of their time at the coast. Inland skeletons reflect an almost entirely terrestrial diet. These results contradict hypotheses about seasonal population movements between the coast and the interior generated from excavated archaeological material. Considerable changes in many of our current views of the Late Stone Age of the south-western Cape will have to be made in order to accommodate these data.}
place = {South Africa}
year = {1984}
month = {Jan}
}