Skip to main content
Ref ID: 34614
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Larsen, C. S.
Schoeninger, M. J.
van der Merwe, Nikolaas J.
Moore, K. M.
Lee-Thorp, J. A.
Title: Carbon and nitrogen stable isotopic signatures of human dietary change in the Georgia Bight
Date: 1992
Source: American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Abstract: Measurement of carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios (delta 13C and delta 15N) in samples of human bone collagen (n = 93) from a temporal series of four prehistoric (early preagricultural, late preagricultural, early agricultural, late agricultural) and two historic (early contact, late contact) periods from the Georgia Bight a continental embayment on the southeastern U.S. Atlantic coast reveals a general temporal trend for less negative delta 13C values and less positive delta 15N values. This trend reflects a concomitant decrease in emphasis on marine resources and increased reliance on C4 based resources, especially maize. This dietary reorientation is most apparent for the early agricultural sample (AD 1150-1300), coinciding with the Mississippian fluorescence in the eastern United States. There is, however, a shift toward the use of C3 (non-maize) foods during the last prehistoric period (AD 1300-1450), which is likely related to environmental stress and social disruption. A heavier use of maize and terrestrial resources in general after the establishment of mission centers on barrier islands is indicated. A reduced dietary breadth during the mission period may have contributed to the extinction of these populations in the eighteenth century.
Date Created: 7/5/2001
Volume: 89
Number: 2
Page Start: 197
Page End: 214