Literature DB >> 23124593

Victims and survivors: stable isotopes used to identify migrants from the Great Irish Famine to 19th century London.

Julia Beaumont1, Jonny Geber, Natasha Powers, Andrew Wilson, Julia Lee-Thorp, Janet Montgomery.   

Abstract

Historical evidence documents mass migration from Ireland to London during the period of the Great Irish Famine of 1845-52. The rural Irish were reliant on a restricted diet based on potatoes but maize, a C(4) plant, was imported from the United States of America in 1846-47 to mitigate against Famine. In London, Irish migrants joined a population with a more varied diet. To investigate and characterize their diet, carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios were obtained from bone collagen of 119 and hair keratin of six individuals from Lukin Street cemetery, Tower Hamlets (1843-54), and bone collagen of 20 individuals from the cemetery at Kilkenny Union Workhouse in Ireland (1847-51). A comparison of the results with other contemporaneous English populations suggests that Londoners may have elevated δ(15) N compared with their contemporaries in other cities. In comparison, the Irish group have lower δ(15) N. Hair analysis combined with bone collagen allows the reconstruction of perimortem dietary changes. Three children aged 5-15 years from Kilkenny have bone collagen δ(13) C values that indicate consumption of maize (C(4)). As maize was only imported into Ireland in quantity from late 1846 and 1847, these results demonstrate relatively rapid bone collagen turnover in children and highlight the importance of age-related bone turnover rates, and the impact the age of the individual can have on studies of short-term dietary change or recent migration. Stable light isotope data in this study are consistent with the epigraphic and documentary evidence for the presence of migrants within the London cemetery.
Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23124593     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22179

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  9 in total

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4.  Multidisciplinary investigations of the diets of two post-medieval populations from London using stable isotopes and microdebris analysis.

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6.  The Great Irish Famine: Identifying Starvation in the Tissues of Victims Using Stable Isotope Analysis of Bone and Incremental Dentine Collagen.

Authors:  Julia Beaumont; Janet Montgomery
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7.  Dental markers of poverty: Biocultural deliberations on oral health of the poor in mid-nineteenth-century Ireland.

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8.  "The dead shall be raised": Multidisciplinary analysis of human skeletons reveals complexity in 19th century immigrant socioeconomic history and identity in New Haven, Connecticut.

Authors:  Gary P Aronsen; Lars Fehren-Schmitz; John Krigbaum; George D Kamenov; Gerald J Conlogue; Christina Warinner; Andrew T Ozga; Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan; Anthony Griego; Daniel W DeLuca; Howard T Eckels; Romuald K Byczkiewicz; Tania Grgurich; Natalie A Pelletier; Sarah A Brownlee; Ana Marichal; Kylie Williamson; Yukiko Tonoike; Nicholas F Bellantoni
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9.  Reconstructing breastfeeding and weaning practices in the Bronze Age Near East using stable nitrogen isotopes.

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  9 in total

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