4 results on '"Marie Louise Jørkov"'
Search Results
2. Mapping human mobility during the third and second millennia BC in present-day Denmark.
- Author
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Karin Margarita Frei, Sophie Bergerbrant, Karl-Göran Sjögren, Marie Louise Jørkov, Niels Lynnerup, Lise Harvig, Morten E Allentoft, Martin Sikora, T Douglas Price, Robert Frei, and Kristian Kristiansen
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
We present results of the largest multidisciplinary human mobility investigation to date of skeletal remains from present-day Denmark encompassing the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC. Through a multi-analytical approach based on 88 individuals from 37 different archaeological localities in which we combine strontium isotope and radiocarbon analyses together with anthropological investigations, we explore whether there are significant changes in human mobility patterns during this period. Overall, our data suggest that mobility of people seems to have been continuous throughout the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC. However, our data also indicate a clear shift in mobility patterns from around 1600 BC onwards, with a larger variation in the geographical origin of the migrants, and potentially including more distant regions. This shift occurred during a transition period at the beginning of the Nordic Bronze Age at a time when society flourished, expanded and experienced an unprecedented economic growth, suggesting that these aspects were closely related.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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3. A matter of months: High precision migration chronology of a Bronze Age female.
- Author
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Karin Margarita Frei, Chiara Villa, Marie Louise Jørkov, Morten E Allentoft, Flemming Kaul, Per Ethelberg, Samantha S Reiter, Andrew S Wilson, Michelle Taube, Jesper Olsen, Niels Lynnerup, Eske Willerslev, Kristian Kristiansen, and Robert Frei
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Establishing the age at which prehistoric individuals move away from their childhood residential location holds crucial information about the socio dynamics and mobility patterns in ancient societies. We present a novel combination of strontium isotope analyses performed on the over 3000 year old "Skrydstrup Woman" from Denmark, for whom we compiled a highly detailed month-scale model of her migration timeline. When combined with physical anthropological analyses this timeline can be related to the chronological age at which the residential location changed. We conducted a series of high-resolution strontium isotope analyses of hard and soft human tissues and combined these with anthropological investigations including CT-scanning and 3D visualizations. The Skrydstrup Woman lived during a pan-European period characterized by technical innovation and great social transformations stimulated by long-distance connections; consequently she represents an important part of both Danish and European prehistory. Our multidisciplinary study involves complementary biochemical, biomolecular and microscopy analyses of her scalp hair. Our results reveal that the Skrydstrup Woman was between 17-18 years old when she died, and that she moved from her place of origin -outside present day Denmark- to the Skrydstrup area in Denmark 47 to 42 months before she died. Hence, she was between 13 to 14 years old when she migrated to and resided in the area around Skrydstrup for the rest of her life. From an archaeological standpoint, this one-time and one-way movement of an elite female during the possible "age of marriageability" might suggest that she migrated with the aim of establishing an alliance between chiefdoms. Consequently, this detailed multidisciplinary investigation provides a novel tool to reconstruct high resolution chronology of individual mobility with the perspective of studying complex patterns of social and economic interaction in prehistory.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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4. Into the fire: Investigating the introduction of cremation to Nordic Bronze Age Denmark: A comparative study between different regions applying strontium isotope analyses and archaeological methods
- Author
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Karin Margarita Frei, Marie Louise Jørkov, Bjarne Henning Nielsen, Anne-Louise Haack Olsen, Samantha Reiter, Niels Algreen Møller, Ulla Mannering, Jens-Henrik Bech, and Flemming Kaul
- Subjects
Provenance ,Topography ,Teeth ,Denmark ,Culture ,Social Sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Geographical locations ,Extant taxon ,Sociology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Habitus ,0601 history and archaeology ,Islands ,Multidisciplinary ,060102 archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Europe ,Chemistry ,Geography ,Archaeology ,Physical Sciences ,language ,Medicine ,Fundamental change ,Anatomy ,Research Article ,Chemical Elements ,010506 paleontology ,Context (archaeology) ,Science ,Scandinavian and Nordic Countries ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Danish ,Strontium Isotopes ,Bronze Age ,European Union ,Chemical Characterization ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Isotope Analysis ,Landforms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Geomorphology ,language.human_language ,Cremation ,Jaw ,Strontium ,Strontium Isotope Analysis ,Earth Sciences ,People and places ,Digestive System ,Head - Abstract
Changes in funerary practices are key to the understanding of social transformations of past societies. Over the course of the Nordic Bronze Age, funerary practices changed from inhumation to cremation. The aim of this study is to shed light on this fundamental change through a cross-examination of archaeometric provenance data and archaeological discussions of the context and layouts of early cremation graves. To this end, we conducted 19 new provenance analyses of strontium isotopes from Early Nordic Bronze age contexts in Thisted County and Zealand and Late Bronze Age contexts from Thisted County and Vesthimmerland (Denmark). These data are subsequently compared with data from other extant relevant studies, including those from Late Bronze Age Fraugde on the Danish island of Fyn. Overall, the variations within our provenience data suggest that the integration and establishment of cremation may not have had a one-to-one relationship with in-migration to Nordic Bronze Age Denmark. Moreover, there seems to be no single blanket scenario which dictated the uptake of cremation as a practice within this part of Southern Scandinavia. By addressinghabitusin relation to the deposition of cremations as juxtaposed with these provenance data¸we hypothesize several potential pathways for the uptake of cremation as a new cultural practice within the Danish Nordic Bronze Age and suggest that this may have been a highly individual process, whose tempo may have been dictated by the specificities of the region(s) concerned.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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