Oxygen Isotope Analysis and Seasonality Determinations: Limits and Potential of a New Technique
- 1 April 1983
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 48 (2) , 390-398
- https://doi.org/10.2307/280460
Abstract
This paper presents a critical assessment of Killingley's approach to the determination of month of collection of marine molluscs by prehistoric people. The basis of the method is careful oxygen isotope measurements made in successive growth increments in the shells. We have analyzed specimens of Monodonta and Patella collected live on the coast of northern Spain, in conjunction with seasonality studies on molluscs from prehistoric sites in the neighborhood. These studies confirm the necessity of making careful analyses of each species under consideration. Given the significance both of interspecies differences and of climatic variability on timescales from a year upwards (particularly important in Killingley's area), we conclude that his apparent accuracy of ± a month is illusory.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concepts of resource exploitation: Continuity and discontinuity in palaeoeconomyWorld Archaeology, 1981
- Seasonality of Mollusk Collecting Determined from O-18 Profiles of Midden ShellsAmerican Antiquity, 1981
- Ice-Age Subsistence in Northern SpainScientific American, 1980
- Gatherer‐hunter to farmer: A social perspectiveWorld Archaeology, 1978
- Local habitat-induced variations in the population dynamics of Patella vulgata L.Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 1975
- Oxygen Isotope and Palaeomagnetic Stratigraphy of Equatorial Pacific Core V28-238: Oxygen Isotope Temperatures and Ice Volumes on a 105 Year and 106 Year ScaleQuaternary Research, 1973
- OXYGEN ISOTOPE ANALYSIS AS A MEANS OF DETERMINING SEASON OF OCCUPATION OF PREHISTORIC MIDDEN SITESArchaeometry, 1973