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Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations

This thesis uses light stable isotope analyses as the basis against which to evaluate the efficacy of canine dental microwear in distinguishing different diets between some Holocene populations in southern Africa. It has been recognised for some time that the use of stable isotopes as the basis for...

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Main Author: Manning, Lee
Other Authors: Sillen, Andrew
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Archaeology 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Manning, Lee
author2 Sillen, Andrew
author_browse Manning, Lee
Sillen, Andrew
author_facet Sillen, Andrew
Manning, Lee
author_sort Manning, Lee
collection Thesis
description This thesis uses light stable isotope analyses as the basis against which to evaluate the efficacy of canine dental microwear in distinguishing different diets between some Holocene populations in southern Africa. It has been recognised for some time that the use of stable isotopes as the basis for dental microwear evaluations may be a valuable method for determining dietary activities. These methods are used together for the first time here. Three southern African Holocene populations representative of different dietary regimes were sampled for both carbon apatite and canine microwear. The information gleaned from carbon apatite values was supplemented by existing collagen information. General dietary trends are discernable between the three populations based on isotopic analyses. Coastal hunter-gatherer populations from Matjes River and Oakhurst subsisted largely on a diet of marine foods, supplemented by C3 or C4 terrestrial resources. K2 agriculturalists indicated diets based largely on the exploitation of domesticated stock supplemented by wild hunted/gathered/snared foods. Isotopic ratios for inland hunter-gatherers vary depending on geographical location, but largely reflect a diet based on the resources available from the biome of habitation. Two Harrismith burials, thought to be hunter-gatherers, may indicate some contact with sedentary populations. These dietary trends are not borne out by canine microwear analyses. Canine microwear indicates statistically significant differences only in the concentration of features. These differences are however subject to groupings and probability limits and are therefore not regarded as viable dietary indicators. Isotopic results for this study substantiate those from previous research in recognising dietary patterns associated with particular Holocene populations in southern Africa. However the analysis of canine dental microwear in human populations is not sensitive enough to detect dietary differences.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:49.949Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Archaeology
publisherStr Department of Archaeology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41426 Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations Manning, Lee Sillen, Andrew Lee-Thorp, Julia Archaeology This thesis uses light stable isotope analyses as the basis against which to evaluate the efficacy of canine dental microwear in distinguishing different diets between some Holocene populations in southern Africa. It has been recognised for some time that the use of stable isotopes as the basis for dental microwear evaluations may be a valuable method for determining dietary activities. These methods are used together for the first time here. Three southern African Holocene populations representative of different dietary regimes were sampled for both carbon apatite and canine microwear. The information gleaned from carbon apatite values was supplemented by existing collagen information. General dietary trends are discernable between the three populations based on isotopic analyses. Coastal hunter-gatherer populations from Matjes River and Oakhurst subsisted largely on a diet of marine foods, supplemented by C3 or C4 terrestrial resources. K2 agriculturalists indicated diets based largely on the exploitation of domesticated stock supplemented by wild hunted/gathered/snared foods. Isotopic ratios for inland hunter-gatherers vary depending on geographical location, but largely reflect a diet based on the resources available from the biome of habitation. Two Harrismith burials, thought to be hunter-gatherers, may indicate some contact with sedentary populations. These dietary trends are not borne out by canine microwear analyses. Canine microwear indicates statistically significant differences only in the concentration of features. These differences are however subject to groupings and probability limits and are therefore not regarded as viable dietary indicators. Isotopic results for this study substantiate those from previous research in recognising dietary patterns associated with particular Holocene populations in southern Africa. However the analysis of canine dental microwear in human populations is not sensitive enough to detect dietary differences. This thesis uses light stable isotope analyses as the basis against which to evaluate the efficacy of canine dental microwear in distinguishing different diets between some Holocene populations in southern Africa. It has been recognised for some time that the use of stable isotopes as the basis for dental microwear evaluations may be a valuable method for determining dietary activities. These methods are used together for the first time here. Three southern African Holocene populations representative of different dietary regimes were sampled for both carbon apatite and canine microwear. The information gleaned from carbon apatite values was supplemented by existing collagen information. General dietary trends are discernable between the three populations based on isotopic analyses. Coastal hunter-gatherer populations from Matjes River and Oakhurst subsisted largely on a diet of marine foods, supplemented by C3 or C4 terrestrial resources. K2 agriculturalists indicated diets based largely on the exploitation of domesticated stock supplemented by wild hunted/gathered/snared foods. Isotopic ratios for inland hunter-gatherers vary depending on geographical location, but largely reflect a diet based on the resources available from the biome of habitation. Two Harrismith burials, thought to be hunter-gatherers, may indicate some contact with sedentary populations. These dietary trends are not borne out by canine microwear analyses. Canine microwear indicates statistically significant differences only in the concentration of features. These differences are however subject to groupings and probability limits and are therefore not regarded as viable dietary indicators. Isotopic results for this study substantiate those from previous research in recognising dietary patterns associated with particular Holocene populations in southern Africa. However the analysis of canine dental microwear in human populations is not sensitive enough to detect dietary differences. 2025-05-09T12:16:54Z 2025-05-09T12:16:54Z 1998 2024-07-11T08:29:57Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41426 en eng application/pdf Department of Archaeology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Archaeology
Manning, Lee
Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
title_full Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
title_fullStr Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
title_full_unstemmed Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
title_short Canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some South African holocene populations
title_sort canine dental microwear and light stable isotopic analyses of some south african holocene populations
topic Archaeology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41426
work_keys_str_mv AT manninglee caninedentalmicrowearandlightstableisotopicanalysesofsomesouthafricanholocenepopulations