Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T17:00:04.522Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Approaches to Determine reservoir effects in ELK/MOOSE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2019

Bente Philippsen*
Affiliation:
Aarhus AMS Centre, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University, Ny Munkegade 120, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark Centre for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet), Aarhus University, Moesgaard Allé 20, 8270 Højbjerg, Denmark
*
Corresponding author. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

The elk/moose (Alces alces) was an important resource for prehistoric societies. In prehistoric art, it is often depicted in connection with water. Biologists find that elk spend much time in water and consume considerable amounts of aquatic plants. As freshwater plants can have reservoir ages of hundreds or even thousands of years, there is a risk of a significant reservoir effect in elk bones and antler, and artifacts made of these materials. This pilot study followed several approaches to investigate the possibility of a freshwater reservoir effect in elk. I analyzed modern, historical and archaeological bones and antler from several sites across Eurasia. Skull bone and antler of the same individual were radiocarbon dated, as antler is formed in summer, when the proportion of aquatic diet is supposed to be highest. Age offsets measured in this study were zero to about 500 years. A difference between bone and antler could not be determined. The reservoir effect appears to be smaller than estimated from accounts of elk diet, even in regions where a substantial freshwater reservoir effect is expected. Therefore, the hypothesis of a large proportion of aquatic diet can be rejected for several of the individuals studied here.

Type
Conference Paper
Copyright
© 2019 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Selected Papers from the 23rd International Radiocarbon Conference, Trondheim, Norway, 17–22 June, 2018

References

REFERENCES

Aaris-Sørensen, K. 1985. Den terrestriske pattedyrsfauna i det sydfynske øhav gennem Atlantikum og Tidlig Subboreal. In: Skaarup, J, editor. Yngre stenalder på øerne syd for Fyn. Rudkøbing: Langelands Museum. p. 458466.Google Scholar
Aaris-Sørensen, K. 2009. Diversity and dynamics of the mammalian fauna in Denmark throughout the last glacial-interglacial cycle, 115–0 kyr BP. Fossils and Strata 57:159.Google Scholar
Andersen, SH, Bietti, A, Bonsall, C, Broadbent, ND, Clark, GA, Gramsch, B, Jacobi, RM, Larsson, L, Morrison, A, Newell, RR, Rozoy, J-G, Straus, LG, Woodman, PC. 1990. Making cultural ecology relevant to Mesolithic Research: I. A data base of 413 Mesolithic fauna assemblages. In: Vermeersch, PM, Van Peer, P, editors. Contributions to the Mesolithic in Europe. Papers presented at the Fourth International Symposium “The Mesolithic in Europe”. Leuven: Leuven University Press. p. 2351.Google Scholar
Barnes, B, Edwards, BJN, Hallam, JS, Stuart, AJ. 1971. Skeleton of a Late Glacial elk associated with barbed points from Poulton-le-Fylde, Lancashire. Nature 232(5311):488489.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ben-David, M, Shochat, E, Adams, LG. 2001. Utility of stable isotope analysis in studying foraging ecology of herbivores: examples from moose and caribou. Alces 37(2):421424.Google Scholar
Bokelmann, K. 1978. Ein Federmesserfundplatz bei Schalkholz, Kreis Dithmarschen. Offa 35:3654.Google Scholar
Bradley, R, Chippindale, C, Helskog, K. 2001. Post-Palaeolithic Europe. In: Whitley, DS, editor. Handbook of rock art research. Walnut Creek (CA): Altamira Press. p. 482529.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 2009. Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51(1):337360.10.1017/S0033822200033865CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burton, RF. 1998. Biology by numbers: an encouragement to quantitative thinking. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butrimas, A, Jankauskas, R. 1998. Mesolithic and Neolithic graves in Lithuania: Data on the transition from foraging to food production. In: Zvelebil, M, Dennell, R, Domanska, L, editors. Harvesting the sea, farming the forest. The emergence of Neolithic societies in the Baltic region. Sheffield: Academic Press. p. 219223.Google Scholar
Carpelan, C. 1975. Elg och bjørnhuvudføremål från Europas nordliga delar. Finskt Museum 1975:597.Google Scholar
Corbet, GB. 1966. The terrestrial mammals of Western Europe. London: Foulis.Google Scholar
Crête, M, Jordan, PA. 1981. Régime Alimentaire des Orignaux du Sud-Ouest Québécois pour les Mois d’Avril à Octobre. The Canadian field-naturalist 95:5056.Google Scholar
Cushwa, CT, Coady, J. 1976. Food habits of moose, Alces alces, in Alaska: A preliminary study using Rumen contents analysis. The Canadian Field-Naturalist 90:1116.Google Scholar
Deforce, K, Bastiaens, J. 2007. The Holocene history of Taxus Baccata (yew) in Belgium and neighbouring Regions. Belgian Journal of Botany 140(2):222237.Google Scholar
Degerbøl, M. 1939. Dyrknogler. In: Mathiassen T, editor. Bundsø. En yngre Stenalders Boplads på Als. København: Det Kongelige Nordiske Oldskriftselskab. p. 85197.Google Scholar
Degerbøl, M. 1964. Some remarks on late- and post-glacial vertebrate fauna and its exological relations in Northern Europe. Journal of Animal Ecology 33:7185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drucker, DG, Hobson, KA, Ouellet, J-P, Courtois, R. 2010. Influence of forage preferences and habitat use on 13C and 15N abundance in wild caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) and moose (Alces alces) from Canada. Isotopes in Environmental and Health Studies 46(1):107121.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geist, V. 1999. Deer of the world. Their evolution, behaviour, and ecology. Mechanicsburg (VA): Stackpole Books.Google Scholar
Gillespie, R, Gowlett, JAJ, Hall, ET, Hedges, REM, Perry, C. 1985. Radiocarbon dates from the Oxford AMS system: Archaeometry datelist 2. Archaeometry 27(2):237246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gramsch, B. 1973. Das Mesolithikum in Mecklenburg und Brandenburg. Zeitliche Gliederung und Formengruppen. In: Kozłowski, SK, editor. The Mesolithic in Europe. Warsaw: Warsaw University Press. p. 209235.Google Scholar
Groß, D. 2014. Welt und Umwelt frühmesolithischer Jäger und Sammler : Mensch-Umwelt-Interaktion im Frühholozän in der nordmitteleuropäischen Tiefebene [dissertation]. Kiel: Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel.Google Scholar
Gumiński, W. 1998. The Peat-bog Site Dudka, Masurian Lakeland: An example of conservative economy. In: Zvelebil, M, Dennell, R, Domanska, L, editors. Harvesting the sea, farming the forest. The emergence of Neolithic societies in the Baltic region. Sheffield: Academic Press. p. 103119.Google Scholar
Hageneder, F. 2013. Yew: Reaktion Books. 224 p.Google Scholar
Hallam, JS, Edwards, BJN, Barnes, B, Stuart, AJ. 1973. The Remains of a Late Glacial elk associated with barbed points from high Furlong, near Blackpool, Lancashire. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 39:100128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartz, S, Terberger, T, Zhilin, MG. 2010. New AMS-dates for the Upper Volga Mesolithic and the origin of microblade technology in Europe. Quartär 57:155169.Google Scholar
Helskog, K. 2004. Landscapes in rock-art: rock-carving and ritual in the old European North. In: Chippindale, C, Nash, G, editors. The figured landscapes of rock-art. Looking at pictures in place. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 265288.Google Scholar
Helskog, K. 2014. Communicating with the world of beings. The World Heritage rock art sites in Alta, Arctic Norway. Challman T, translator. Oxford: Oxbow Books.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heptner, VG, Nasimowitsch, AA, Bannikov, AG. 1966. Die Säugetiere der Sowjetunion Band 1. Paarhufer und Unpaarhufer. Heptner, VG, Naumov, NP, editors. Jena: Gustav Fischer Verlag.Google Scholar
Heptner, VG, Nasimovich, AA. 1967. Der Elch: Alces alces L. Wittenberg: A. Ziemsen.Google Scholar
Iršėnas, M. 2000. Elk figurines in the Stone Age art of the Baltic area. Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis 20:93105.Google Scholar
Jacobi, RM. 1986. Accelerator mass spectrometry dating of Upper Palaeolithic finds, with the Poulton elk as an example. In: Roe, DA, editor. Studies in the Upper Palaeolithic of Britain and Northwest Europe.Google Scholar
Jessen, CA, Pedersen, KB, Christensen, C, Olsen, J, Mortensen, MF, Hansen, KM. 2015. Early Maglemosian culture in the Preboreal landscape: Archaeology and vegetation from the earliest Mesolithic site in Denmark at Lundby Mose, Sjælland. Quaternary International 378:7387.10.1016/j.quaint.2014.03.056CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kabaciński, J, Hartz, S, Terberger, T. 2011. Elks in the early Stone Age art of the northern Lowlands. Prähistorische Zeitschrift 86:151164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kashina, EA, Zhulnikov, AM. 2011. Rods with elk heads: Symbol in ritual context. Estonian Journal of Archaeology 15(1):1831.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keaveney, EM, Reimer, PJ. 2012. Understanding the variability in freshwater radiocarbon reservoir offsets: a cautionary tale. Journal of Archaeological Science 39(5):13061316.10.1016/j.jas.2011.12.025CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kielland, K. 2001. Stable isotope signatures of moose in relation to seasonal forage composition: a hypothesis. Alces 37(2):329337.Google Scholar
Kuzmin, YV, Fiedel, SJ, Street, M, Reimer, PJ, Boudin, M, van der Plicht, J, Panov, VS, Hodgins, GWL. 2018. A laboratory inter-comparison of AMS 14C dating of bones of the Miesenheim IV elk (Rhineland, Germany) and its implications for the date of the Laacher See eruption. Quaternary Geochronology 48:716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsson, L. 2015. On the trail of the elks: Finds from the preboreal in southern Sweden. In: Sázelová, S, Novák, M, Mizerová, A, editors. Forgotten times and spaces: New perspectives in paleoanthropological, paleoetnological and archaeological studies. Brno: Institute of Archeology of the Czech Academy of Sciences; Masaryk University. p. 468478.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LaZerte, BD, Szalados, JE. 1982. Stable carbon isotope ratio of submerged freshwater macrophytes1,1. Limnology and Oceanography 27(3):413418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lenarz, MS, Wright, RG, Schrage, MW, Edwards, AJ. 2011. Compositional analysis of moose habitat in northeastern Minnesota. Alces 47: 135149.Google Scholar
LeResche, RE, Davis, JL. 1973. Importance of nonbrowse foods to moose on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. The Journal of Wildlife Management 37(3):279287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levin, I, Kromer, B, Hammer, S. 2013. Atmospheric Δ14CO2 trend in Western European background air from 2000 to 2012. Tellus B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology 65(1):20092.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loze, I. 2010. Neolīta dzintara aļņa galvas figūra Sārnatē. Mākslas Vēsture un Teorija 13:58.Google Scholar
Mathiassen, T. 1953. An amber elk head from Zealand. Acta Archaeologica 23(1953):167169.Google Scholar
Møller Hansen, K, Buck Pedersen, K. 2006. With or without bones – Late Paleolithic hunters in South Zealand. In: Møller Hansen, K, Buck Pedersen, K, editors. Across the Western Baltic : proceeding from an archaeological conference in Vordingborg. Vordingborg: Sydsjællands Museum. p. 93110.Google Scholar
Ødum, H. 1920. Et Elsdyrfund fra Taaderup paa Falster. Danmarks Geologiske Undersøgelse IV. Række Bd. 1(Nr. 11):116.Google Scholar
Peek, JM. 1998. Habitat Relationships. In: Franzmann, AW, Schwartz, CC, editors. Ecology and management of the North American moose. Washington D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 351375.Google Scholar
Peterson, RL. 1955. North American moose: University of Toronto.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philippsen, B. 2013. The freshwater reservoir effect in radiocarbon dating. Heritage Science 1:24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philippsen, B, Heinemeier, J. 2013. Freshwater reservoir effect variability in Northern Germany. Radiocarbon 55(2–3):10851101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, RL, Berg, WE, Siniff, DB. 1973. Moose movement patterns and range use in northwestern Minnesota. The Journal of Wildlife Management 37(3):266278.10.2307/3800117CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Płonka, T, Kowalski, K, Malkiewicz, M, Kuryszko, J, Socha, P, Stefaniak, K. 2011. A new ornamented artefact from Poland: final palaeolithic symbolism from an environmental perspective. Journal of Archaeological Science 38(3):723733.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsey, CB, Lee, S. 2013. Recent and planned developments of the program OxCal. Radiocarbon 55(2):720730.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Beck, JW, Blackwell, PG, Bronk Ramsey, C, Buck, CE, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL, Friedrich, M, Grootes, PM, Guilderson, TP, Haflidason, H, Hajdas, I, Hatté, C, Heaton, TJ, Hoffmann, DL, Hogg, AG, Hughen, KA, Kaiser, KF, Kromer, B, Manning, SW, Niu, M, Reimer, RW, Richards, DA, Scott, EM, Southon, JR, Staff, RA, Turney, CSM, van der Plicht, J. 2013. IntCal13 and Marine13 radiocarbon age calibration curves 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55(4):18691887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renecker, LA, Schwartz, CC. 1998. Food habits and feeding behavior. In: Franzmann, AW, Schwartz, CC, editors. Ecology and management of the North American moose. Washington D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 403439.Google Scholar
Richter, J. 1991. Aspects of the palaeoecology of neolithic man. In: Rasmussen, LW, editor. Kainsbakke. En kystboplads fra yngre stenalder. Grenå: Djurslands Museum, Dansk Fiskerimuseum.Google Scholar
Riede, F, Grimm, SB, Weber, M-J, Fahlke, JM. 2010. Neue Daten für alte Grabungen. Ein Beitrag zur spätglazialen Archäologie und Faunengeschichte Norddeutschlands. Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt 40:297–216.Google Scholar
Runtz, MWP. 1991. Moose country. Saga of the woodland moose. Minocqua: NorthWord Press, Inc.Google Scholar
Sapwell, M. 2014. “Think tanks” in prehistory: problem solving and subjectivity at Nämforsen, northern Sweden. In: Ginn, V, Enlander, R, Crozier, R, editors. Exploring prehistoric identity in Europe: Our construct or theirs?. Oxford: Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Schmölcke, U, Zachos, FE. 2005. Holocene distribution and extinction of the moose (Alces alces, Cervidae) in Central Europe. Mammalian Biology 70(6):329344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, CC, Renecker, LA. 1998. Nutrition and energetics. In: Franzmann, AW, Schwartz, CC, editors. Ecology and management of the North American moose. Washington D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 441478.Google Scholar
Singleton, F. 1989, 1998. A short history of Finland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sørensen, I. 1978. Datering af elsdyrknoglerne fra Skottemarke og Favrbo. Aarbøger for nordisk oldkyndighed og historie 1978:3344.Google Scholar
Terberger, T. 2006. From the First Humans to the Mesolithic Hunters in the Northern German Lowlands – Current Results and Trends. In: Møller Hansen, K, Buck Pedersen, K, editors. Across the Western Baltic. Proceedings of the archaeological conference “The Prehistory and Early Medieval Period in the Western Baltic” in Vordingborg, South Zealand, Denmark, March 27th–29th, 2003. Vordingborg: Sydsjællands Museum. p. 2356.Google Scholar
Timmermann, HR, Racey, GD. 1989. Moose access routes to an aquatic feeding site. Alces 25:104–11.Google Scholar
Timofeev, VI. 1998. The Beginning of the Neolithic in the Eastern Baltic. In: Zvelebil, M, Dennell, R, Domanska, L, editors. Harvesting the sea, farming the forest. The emergence of Neolithic societies in the Baltic region. Sheffield: Academic Press. p. 225236.Google Scholar
Van Ballenberghe, V, Miquelle, DG, MacCracken, JG. 1989. Heavy utilization of woody plants by moose during summer at Denali National Park, Alaska. Alces 25:3135.Google Scholar
Veil, S, Breest, K, Grootes, PM, Nadeau, M-J, Hüls, M. 2012. A 14,000-year-old amber elk and the origins of northern European art. Antiquity 86(333):660673.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westerdahl, C. 2005. Seal on land, elk at sea: Notes on and applications of the ritual landscape at the seaboard. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 34(1):223.10.1111/j.1095-9270.2005.00039.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaliznyak, L. 1998. The Ethnographic record, and structural changes in the prehistoric hunter-gatherer economy of boreal Europe. In: Zvelebil, M, Dennell, R, Domanska, L, editors. Harvesting the sea, farming the forest. The emergence of Neolithic societies in the Baltic region. Sheffield: Academic Press. p. 4551.Google Scholar
Zhilin, MG. 2006. Das Mesolithikum im Gebiet zwischen den Flüssen Wolga und Oka: einige Forschungsergebnisse der letzen Jahre. Prähistorische Zeitschrift 81(1):148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhilin, MG. 2010. Mesolithic Zoomorphic Perforated Antler Staff Heads from Central Russia and Eastern Urals: Ceremonial Weapons or Shaman’s Staves? In: Legrand-Pineau, A, Sidéra, I, Buc, N, David, E, Scheinsohn, V, editors. Ancient and Modern Bone Artefacts from America to Russia. Cultural, technological and functional signature. Oxford: Archaeopress. p. 135140.Google Scholar
Zhilin, MG, Savchenko, SN, Nikulina, EA, Schmölcke, U, Hartz, S, Terberger, T. 2014. Eleven bone arrowheads and a dog coprolite – the Mesolithic site of Beregovaya 2, Urals region (Russia). Quartär 61:165187.Google Scholar
Zhulnikov, AM, Koshina, EA. 2010. “Staffs with elk heads” in the culture of the ancient population of the Eastern Urals, Northern and Eastern Europe. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia 38(2):7178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar