Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
Interdisciplinary Center for Archaeology and Evolution of Human Behaviour, University of Algarve, Faro, Portugal.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 21;15(10):e0240464. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240464. eCollection 2020.
Schipluiden (3630-3380 cal BC), the earliest known year-round settlement in the Rhine-Meuse Delta in the Netherlands, is a key site for addressing the nature of Neolithic subsistence in the wetlands of northwestern Europe. A preliminary zooarchaeological study suggested that cattle husbandry was a major activity at Schipluiden. In contrast, stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of human remains from the site indicated a marine-oriented diet, implying that the Mesolithic-Neolithic dietary transition continued well into the mid-4th Millennium BC in this region. Here, we re-investigate the role and nature of cattle husbandry at Neolithic Schipluiden using mortality profiles and stable isotope analysis (δ18O, δ13C, δ15N) of animal bone collagen and tooth enamel. The age-at-death analysis suggests that cattle were managed for both meat and milk production. The δ18O and δ13C analysis of tooth enamel provide evidence that calving spread over five-and-a-half-months, which would have led to a longer availability of milk throughout the year. Cattle were grazing in open, marshy environments near the site and winter foddering was practiced occasionally. The faunal isotopic data also reveal that the high 15N in human bone collagen is more likely to signal the consumption of products from cattle that grazed on 15N-enriched salt marsh plants around the site, rather than a marine-oriented diet. This undermines the previous interpretation of the dietary practices at Schipluiden by showing that human diet in mid-4th millennium BC Rhine-Meuse area was fully "Neolithic", based primarily on products from domesticates, especially cattle, with some input from wild terrestrial and aquatic resources available in their surroundings, contrary to what has been proposed before. Collating these results demonstrates a high level of investment in cattle husbandry, highlighting the social and economic importance of cattle at the lower Rhine-Meuse Delta during the 4th millennium BC.
施皮尔杜伊岑(约公元前 3630-3380 年)是荷兰莱茵-默兹三角洲最早被发现的全年定居点,是解决西北欧湿地新石器时代人类生存问题的关键地点。初步的动物考古学研究表明,当时在施皮尔杜伊岑,牛的养殖是一项主要活动。相比之下,对该遗址人类遗骸的稳定碳氮同位素分析表明,他们的饮食以海洋为导向,这意味着从中石器时代到新石器时代的饮食转变在该地区一直持续到公元前 4 世纪中叶。在这里,我们通过对动物骨骼胶原和牙齿珐琅质的稳定同位素分析(δ18O、δ13C、δ15N)以及对死亡年龄的分析,重新研究了新石器时代施皮尔杜伊岑牛养殖的作用和性质。年龄分析表明,牛的养殖目的既包括产肉,也包括产奶。牙齿珐琅质的 δ18O 和 δ13C 分析提供的证据表明,牛的产犊期持续了五个半月,这使得全年牛奶的供应时间更长。牛在遗址附近开阔的沼泽环境中放牧,偶尔也会进行冬季饲料喂养。动物群的同位素数据还表明,人类骨骼胶原中的高 15N 更有可能表明,人类食用的是在遗址周围富含 15N 的盐沼植物上放牧的牛的产品,而不是海洋导向的饮食。这推翻了之前对施皮尔杜伊岑饮食实践的解释,表明公元前 4 世纪中叶莱茵-默兹地区人类的饮食完全是“新石器时代”的,主要基于家畜,尤其是牛的产品,同时也有一些来自其周围环境中野生的陆地和水生资源,这与之前的观点相反。综合这些结果表明,当时对牛养殖进行了大量投资,突出了公元前 4 世纪下莱茵-默兹三角洲牛的社会和经济重要性。