Abstract

The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly productive grasslands for Bronze Age herders and their flocks of sheep, goat, and cattle. While the archaeological evidence points to a largely pastoral lifestyle, knowledge regarding the general composition of human diets and their variation across landscapes and during the different phases of the Bronze Age is still restricted. Human and animal skeletal remains from the burial mounds that dominate the archaeological landscape and their stable isotope compositions are major sources of dietary information. Here, we present stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data of bone collagen of 105 human and 50 animal individuals from the 5th millennium BC to the Sarmatian period, with a strong focus on the Bronze Age and its cultural units including Maykop, Yamnaya, Novotitorovskaya, North Caucasian, Catacomb, post-Catacomb and late Bronze Age groups. The samples comprise all inhumations with sufficient bone preservation from five burial mound sites and a flat grave cemetery as well as subsamples from three further sites. They represent the Caucasus Mountains in the south, the piedmont zone and Kuban steppe with humid steppe and forest vegetation to its north, and more arid regions in the Caspian steppe. The stable isotope compositions of the bone collagen of humans and animals varied across the study area and reflect regional diversity in environmental conditions and diets. The data agree with meat, milk, and/or dairy products from domesticated herbivores, especially from sheep and goats having contributed substantially to human diets, as it is common for a largely pastoral economy. This observation is also in correspondence with the faunal remains observed in the graves and offerings of animals in the mound shells. In addition, foodstuffs with elevated carbon and nitrogen isotope values, such as meat of unweaned animals, fish, or plants, also contributed to human diets, especially among communities living in the more arid landscapes. The regional distinction of the animal and human data with few outliers points to mobility radii that were largely concentrated within the environmental zones in which the respective sites are located. In general, dietary variation among the cultural entities as well as regarding age, sex and archaeologically indicated social status is only weakly reflected. There is, however, some indication for a dietary shift during the Early Bronze Age Maykop period.

Highlights

  • Grassland-adapted animal husbandry was one of the most efficient economic strategies of prehistoric communities in Eurasia

  • Collecting and synthesizing evidence for human and animal dietary compositions is a central aspect of modern archaeological research, and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis (δ13C and δ15N) of bone collagen contributes increasingly to such investigations [9, 10]

  • Regional variation of carbon and nitrogen isotope values at the base of the food webs The stable isotope values of the collagen of both animals and humans were highly variable, and the most prominent difference existed between the data from the piedmont area/Kuban steppe and those from the Caspian steppe (Fig 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Grassland-adapted animal husbandry was one of the most efficient economic strategies of prehistoric communities in Eurasia. Pastoralists relied on the vast resources of steppe environments and profited from close interdependencies with their animals [1]. They were counterpoints to sedentary farming groups with agro-pastoral subsistence practices, i.e. economies based on crop cultivation and localized, small-scale herding. Human and animal skeletal remains from burial contexts represent essential sources of spatially and chronologically nuanced information regarding social practices and economic strategies, especially since settlement sites are largely unknown between the late 4th and the mid-2nd millennium BC [8]. Some existing studies already focused on the north Caucasus and attested to complex entanglements between environmentally influenced isotopic compositions of the plants at the base of the food webs as well as distinct dietary habits and economic strategies [11,12,13,14,15,16,17]

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