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A dietary study of the Kamegoaka culture population during the final Jomon period, Japan, using stable isotope and lipid analyses of ceramic residues.
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Akiko Horiuchi
Y Miyata
N Kamijo
Lucy Cramp
Richard Evershed
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Original language
English
Pages (from-to)
721-736.
Journal
Radiocarbon
Volume
57
Issue number
4
Date
Published -
2015
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Related faculties, schools or groups
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology
School of Chemistry
Cabot Institute
Biological and Archaeological Chemistry
Atmospheric and Global Change Chemistry
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Regional diversity in subsistence among early farmers in Southeast Europe revealed by archaeological organic residues
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Cholesterol degradation in archaeological pottery mediated by fired clay and fatty acid pro-oxidants
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From the inside out: Upscaling organic residue analyses of archaeological ceramics
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A Dietary Study of the Kamegaoka Culture Population during the Final Jomon Period, Japan, Using Stable Isotope and Lipid Analyses of Ceramic Residues
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Widespread exploitation of the honeybee by early Neolithic farmers
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A Dietary Study of the Kamegaoka Culture Population during the Final Jomon Period, Japan, Using Stable Isotope and Lipid Analyses of Ceramic Residues
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