Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1035729 Journal of Archaeological Science 2011 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper explores the impact of animal manure application on the δ15N values of a broad range of crops (cereals and pulses), under a range of manuring levels/regimes and at a series of locations extending from northwest Europe to the eastern Mediterranean. We included both agricultural field experiments and areas where ‘traditional’ farming is practised. Our aim is to ground-truth interpretation of δ15N values in archaeobotanical crop remains as evidence of past growing conditions and husbandry practices. The results confirm the potentially radical impact of manuring on δ15N values in cereals, depending on manuring level, but indicate only a slight effect on pulses, which can fix atmospheric nitrogen. The expected geographical trend towards greater δ15N with increasing climatic aridity is not apparent, probably because the growing conditions for crops are ‘buffered’ through crop management. Each of these observations has fundamental implications for archaeobotanical interpretation of δ15N values as evidence of land use practices and (together with analysis of bone collagen/tooth enamel in potential consumers) palaeodiet.

► We examine the affects of animal manure application on cereal grain δ15N values. ► Crops grown in Syria, Germany, Denmark and the UK were given different manure levels. ► δ15N values of manured grains were significantly higher compared to unmanured grains. ► The results will aid interpretation of growing conditions of ancient crop remains. ► The implications for palaeodiet and trophic level reconstructions are discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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