1. Mapping human mobility during the third and second millennia BC in present-day Denmark
- Author
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Niels Lynnerup, Karl-Göran Sjögren, Karin Margarita Frei, Kristian Kristiansen, T. Douglas Price, Morten E. Allentoft, Marie Louise Jørkov, Sophie Bergerbrant, Robert Frei, Martin Sikora, and Lise Harvig
- Subjects
Teeth ,Denmark ,Social Sciences ,Stone Age ,Present day ,01 natural sciences ,Geographical locations ,law.invention ,law ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Radiocarbon dating ,Multidisciplinary ,060102 archaeology ,Geography ,Geology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Radioactive Carbon Dating ,Europe ,Chemistry ,Archaeology ,Neolithic Period ,Physical Sciences ,Medicine ,Ethnology ,Anatomy ,Research Article ,Chemical Elements ,010506 paleontology ,Science ,Human Migration ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Human Geography ,Bronze Age ,Humans ,European Union ,Chemical Characterization ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Isotope Analysis ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Geologic Time ,Jaw ,Strontium ,Anthropology ,Archaeological Dating ,Strontium Isotope Analysis ,Period (geology) ,Earth Sciences ,Human Mobility ,People and places ,Digestive System ,Head - 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
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