Rebay-Salisbury Katharina, Dunne Julie, Salisbury Roderick B, Kern Daniela, Frisch Alexander, Evershed Richard P
Austrian Archaeological Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria.
Organic Geochemistry Unit, School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Child Past. 2021 Sep 7;14(2):102-124. doi: 10.1080/17585716.2021.1956051. eCollection 2021.
Small ceramic vessels with spouts, from which liquid can be poured, became popular during the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in Central Europe (. 1200-600 BC). Such feeding vessels represent a functional type and are highly variable in size, shape and decoration. Found both on settlements and within graves, their association with child burials suggest they might have been used to feed babies and small children. Combined lipid and isotope analysis was performed on 24 of these feeding vessels, with seven delivering interpretable results. Feeding vessels associated with child burials tend to deliver a ruminant milk signal, whereas other vessels were used to process ruminant and non-ruminant adipose fats. Here, we highlight the potential significance of feeding vessels as indicators of changing childcare practices during times of population increase, settlement nucleation and mobility, possibly involving out-sourcing the feeding of babies and small children to persons other than the mother.
带有壶嘴、可从中倒出液体的小型陶瓷容器,在中欧的青铜时代晚期和铁器时代早期(公元前1200 - 600年)开始流行。这种喂食容器代表一种功能类型,在尺寸、形状和装饰方面有很大差异。它们在定居点和墓葬中都有发现,与儿童墓葬的关联表明它们可能曾被用于喂养婴儿和幼儿。对其中24个这种喂食容器进行了脂质和同位素联合分析,有7个得出了可解读的结果。与儿童墓葬相关的喂食容器往往呈现反刍动物奶的信号,而其他容器则用于加工反刍动物和非反刍动物的脂肪。在此,我们强调喂食容器作为人口增长、定居点聚集和人口流动时期育儿方式变化指标的潜在重要性,这种变化可能涉及将婴儿和幼儿的喂养外包给母亲以外的其他人。