Litcius/Paper detail

Ancient DNA, lipid biomarkers and palaeoecological evidence reveals construction and life on early medieval lake settlements

Antony G. Brown, Maarten van Hardenbroek, Thierry Fonville, Kimberley Davies, Helen Mackay, Emily Murray, Katie Head, Phil Barratt, Finbar McCormick, Gentile Francesco Ficetola, Ludovic Gielly, Andrew C. G. Henderson, Anne Crone, G. Cavers, Peter G. Langdon, Nicki J. Whitehouse, Duncan Pirrie, Inger Greve Alsos

2021Scientific Reports30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Direct evidence of ancient human occupation is typically established through archaeological excavation. Excavations are costly and destructive, and practically impossible in some lake and wetland environments. We present here an alternative approach, providing direct evidence from lake sediments using DNA metabarcoding, steroid lipid biomarkers (bile acids) and from traditional environmental analyses. Applied to an early Medieval Celtic settlement in Ireland (a crannog) this approach provides a site chronology and direct evidence of human occupation, crops, animal farming and on-site slaughtering. This is the first independently-dated, continuous molecular archive of human activity from an archeological site, demonstrating a link between animal husbandry, food resources, island use. These sites are under threat but are impossible to preserve in-situ so this approach can be used, with or without excavation, to produce a robust and full site chronology and provide direct evidence of occupation, the use of plants and animals, and activities such as butchery.

Topics & Concepts

ExcavationArchaeologyChronologyAncient DNAHuman settlementArchaeological evidenceWetlandSettlement (finance)TaphonomyZooarchaeologyGeographyEcologyBiologyComputer sciencePopulationSociologyWorld Wide WebDemographyPaymentEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity StudiesForensic and Genetic ResearchArchaeology and ancient environmental studies