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Published December 2009 | public
Journal Article

Using carbon isotopes to track dietary change in modern, historical, and ancient primates

Abstract

Stable isotope analysis can be used to document dietary changes within the lifetimes of individuals and may prove useful for investigating fallback food consumption in modern, historical, and ancient primates. Feces, hair, and enamel are all suitable materials for such analysis, and each has its own benefits and limitations. Feces provide highly resolved temporal dietary data, but are generally limited to providing dietary information about modern individuals and require labor-intensive sample collection and analysis. Hair provides less well-resolved data, but has the advantage that one or a few hair strands can provide evidence of dietary change over months or years. Hair is also available in museum collections, making it possible to investigate the diets of historical specimens. Enamel provides the poorest temporal resolution of these materials, but is often preserved for millions of years, allowing examination of dietary change in deep time. We briefly discuss the use of carbon isotope data as it pertains to recent thinking about fallback food consumption in ancient hominins and suggest that we may need to rethink the functional significance of the australopith masticatory package.

Additional Information

© 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. Received: 11 October 2008; accepted: 5 May 2009; published Online: 3 Nov 2009. We thank Teresa Kearney, Stephany Potze, and Francis Thackeray of the Transvaal Museum for their help and access to specimens. We also thank Jacqui Codron, Rina Grant, Charles Trennery, Rita Jansen van Vuuren, Nikolaas van der Merwe, and the staff at the Kruger National Park, South Africa, for their help in and out of the field. John Lanham, Ian Newton, Jacqui Codron, and Linda Ayliffe helped at various points with the mass spectrometry.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023