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INVESTIGATING SEASONALITY AND SEASON OF BIRTH IN PAST HERDS: A REFERENCE SET OF SHEEP ENAMEL STABLE OXYGEN ISOTOPE RATIOS
Author(s) -
BALASSE M.,
OBEIN G.,
UGHETTOMONFRIN J.,
MAINLAND I.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
archaeometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1475-4754
pISSN - 0003-813X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-4754.2011.00624.x
Subject(s) - enamel paint , seasonality , herd , zoology , tooth enamel , molar , biology , environmental science , ecology , dentistry , paleontology , medicine
Intra‐tooth sequential analysis of enamel δ 18 O is currently used to investigate birth seasonality in past animal populations, offering new insights into seasonal availability of animal resources, herd management and seasonality of site occupation. Reference data sets are still required to address two major difficulties: (1) that inter‐individual variability in the record of the seasonal cycle is affected by tooth size; and (2) that the season of birth cannot be directly estimated from the timing of tooth growth, because of a delay in enamel mineralization. We present a data set acquired on the lower second molar of 10 modern sheep from Rousay (Orkney) born within a few weeks of each other in April/May and submitted to the same environmental conditions until death. All sheep have recorded a sinusoidal pattern of δ 18 O variation spanning approximately a year. From the difference between the expected and the measured time sequence, the delay of enamel mineralization is estimated to be 5–6 months. The data set is then described using a model mainly based on a cosine function. The period, corresponding to the length of the M2 crown formed over a year, averaged 35.8 mm. A very slight variation of tooth growth rate with time and no attenuation of the isotopic signal towards the cervical margin of the crown could be detected in this data set. The lowest δ 18 O values, corresponding to the sheep's first winter, were tracked at a distance from the enamel/root junction that varied between 23.0 and 30.3 mm (x min mean = 27.6 mm); the highest δ 18 O values, corresponding to the sheep's second summer, were between 6.3 and 11.6 mm (x max mean = 9.9 mm). Most of the variability can be attributed to tooth size. When normalized on the period, x min and x max are 0.28 ( ± 0.05) and 0.78 ( ± 0.05) on average, meaning that the Rousay sheep have recorded the minimum and maximum δ 18 O values on average at 78% and 28%, respectively, of the end of the periodic cycle recorded in the second molar.