Carbon and Oxygen Isotope Analysis of Modern Cattle (Bos indicus) Molars from the Central Narmada Valley, India

被引:1
作者
Sandhu, Sonika [1 ]
Sathe, Vijay [2 ]
Chakarborty, Kalyan Sekhar [3 ]
Chakraborty, Supriyo [4 ]
Chauhan, Parth R. [5 ]
机构
[1] Deemed Univ, Deccan Coll, Post Grad & Res Inst, Dept Ancient Indian Hist Culture & Archaeol, Pune, Maharashtra, India
[2] Deemed Univ, Deccan Coll, Post Grad & Res Inst, Dept Ancient Indian Hist Culture & Archaeol,Archa, Pune, Maharashtra, India
[3] McMaster Univ, Lab Interdisciplinary Res Archaeol Ceram, Hamilton, ON, Canada
[4] MoES, Indian Inst Trop Meteorol, Pune, Maharashtra, India
[5] Indian Inst Sci Educ & Res, Dept Humanities & Social Sci, Mohali, Punjab, India
来源
ANCIENT ASIA-JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF SOUTH ASIAN ARCHAEOLOGY | 2021年 / 12卷
关键词
TOOTH ENAMEL; BONE-COLLAGEN; VARIABILITY; FRACTIONATION; NITROGEN; RATIOS; PLANTS; WATER; DIET; RECONSTRUCTION;
D O I
10.5334/aa.210
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
The carbon and oxygen isotopic composition of tooth enamel is connected to the diet and environment in which it develops. Enamel is invariably preserved for a long time and hence provides the best material for chemical analysis. Teeth are known to reflect a record of dietary and environmental changes taking place during their growth. This paper presents the results of intra-tooth oxygen and carbon isotope values (delta O-18, delta C-13) of first, second and third molars obtained from five modern cattle collected from two locations: Dhansi and Hathnora from the Central Narmada Valley, India. The specimens chosen for this study are individuals presumed to have died naturally and/or disposed of by local farmers. The isotopic analysis of tooth enamel is broadly indicative of a C-3 diet with values of delta C-13 (enamel bioapatite) ranging from -6.4 parts per thousand VPDB to -27.31 parts per thousand VPDB with an average of -16.68 parts per thousand VPDB. The delta O-18 values measured in the enamel samples range between of 1.76 parts per thousand to 25.15 parts per thousand with a mean value of 22.17 parts per thousand VSMOW. These present day dental enamel values of modern cattle were compared against the published enamel isotope values of Bos namadicus, that occupied this region during the Pleistocene era, in order to understand the possible shift in diet and environment and their inter-relationship between the modern and the Pleistocene Era. The fossil sample produced enriched values of carbon isotopes compared to the modern taxa, indicating a C-4 rich diet, while the diet of the modern cattle is extensively dominated by C-3 type vegetation. We also observed an enriched oxygen isotope values for the fossil sample compared to the modern samples, indicating a possible effect of diagenesis and/or a shift in the temperature and rainfall.
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页数:19
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