8 research outputs found
A combined analysis of dietary habits in the Bronze Age site of Ballabio (northern Italy)
In recent years, the ever more frequent studies on the Bronze Age in northern Italy have shown the importance of this area for
cultural and economic exchanges between central and southern Europe. The aim of the present multidisciplinary study was to
define the health, behaviour and dietary habits in an Early-Middle Bronze Age skeletal sample from the Ballabio necropolis
(Lecco, Italy). Skeletal remains were found in two adjacent funerary structures, interpreted as primary burials and as places of
secondary deposition. Studies on the health and diet of the individuals were based on dental-alveolar features, and carbon and
nitrogen stable isotope ratios. The individuals exhibit a low prevalence of caries, abscesses and ante-mortem tooth loss, but do
exhibit high calculus and alveolar resorption rates, suggesting a subsistence pattern based on pastoralism more than agriculture.
Stable isotope ratios indicate a mixed diet and support the hypothesis of a protein intake based on terrestrial resources, with an
appreciable amount of animal foodstuffs. There are no statistically significant sex or age differences, although adolescents and
young adults (15–25 years old) seem to have consumed more animal protein. The isotope data from Ballabio are similar to other
Early Bronze Age data collected from other sites in northern Italy. However, the pattern changed during the Middle Bronze Age,
suggesting complex agricultural modifications in this area impacted by new crops such as millet