- Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology
- Archaeology and ancient environmental studies
- Isotope Analysis in Ecology
- Indigenous Studies and Ecology
- Pleistocene-Era Hominins and Archaeology
- Linguistics and Cultural Studies
- Eurasian Exchange Networks
- Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
- Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies
- Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
- Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
- Marine animal studies overview
- Animal Diversity and Health Studies
Archéozoologie et Archéobotanique
2016-2021
Sorbonne Université
2020-2021
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
2015-2020
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
2015
Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon : Terre, Planètes et Environnement
2015
École Normale Supérieure de Lyon
2015
Strontium isotopic analysis of sequentially formed tissues, such as tooth enamel, is commonly used to study provenance and mobility humans animals. However, the potential 87Sr/86Sr in enamel track high-frequency movements has not yet been established, part due lack data on modern animals known movement predictive model isotope variation across landscape. To tackle this issue, we measured plant samples taken from a 2000 km2 area Altai Mountains (Mongolia), domestic caprines whose was...
Pastoral nomadism is of great cultural and economic importance in several regions the world today. However, documenting ancient patterns mobility societies where pastoralism was central challenging requires tailored approaches methodologies. Here we use strontium, oxygen carbon isotopic analyses dental enamel, together with a local strontium isoscape, to reconstruct seven domestic horses deposited Late Bronze Age grave from western Mongolia. Radiocarbon indicates that animals were within...
Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope time series performed in continuously growing tissues (hair, tooth enamel) are commonly used to reconstruct the dietary history of modern ancient animals. Predicting effects altitudinal mobility on animal δ13 C δ15 N values remains difficult as several variables such temperature, water availability or soil type can contribute composition. Modern references adapted region interest therefore essential.Between June 2015 July 2018, six free-ranging domestic...
Abstract Kazakh herders of the Mongolian Altai practice a form nomadism characterised by high altitudinal amplitude and more frequent movements than in other regions Mongolia. This paper proposes local scale study nomadic practices using an original multidisciplinary methodological approach combining anthropological surveys several years' GPS data tracking five herder families' herds. The dialogue between geo-localised qualitative over consecutive years makes it possible to better understand...