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Ref ID: 30155
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Clayton, F.
Sealy, J.
Pfeiffer, S.
Title: Weaning age among foragers at Matjes River Rock Shelter, South Africa, from stable nitrogen and carbon isotope analyses
Date: 2006
Source: American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Abstract: Matjes River Rock Shelter is a large shell midden on the southern coast of South Africa. Stable nitrogen (d15N) and carbon (d13C) isotope ratios were measured in bone collagen and dentine from human skeletons excavated from this site in order to establish a weaning curve in mid-Holocene hunter-gatherers. d15N results show a progressive increase in individuals from birth to 1.5 years old. d13C results are more tightly clustered and mirror the steady progressive change seen for d15N. We deduce that children at Matjes River Rock Shelter were breastfed for at least the first 1.5 years after birth, and were weaned sometime between 2–4 years of age. A similar pattern was documented for historic-era Kalahari foraging people, where the interbirth spacing was approximately 3 years. This study provides the first direct evidence for an extended period of breastfeeding, and thus long interbirth intervals, among prehistoric foragers, even when those foragers lived in an environment with abundant food resources.
Date Created: 1/4/2007
Volume: 129
Number: 2
Page Start: 311
Page End: 317