Publications by authors named "Madgwick R"

Reconstructing past herd mobility, reproduction, and diet is crucial for understanding animal management practices among the first sedentary farming communities. It can also shed light on how domestic animals were integrated into the existing exchange networks of goods, products, and raw materials, and how they contributed to broader economic and social changes during the Neolithic. Despite the longstanding importance of cattle (Bos taurus) to herders, the role of cattle in the daily, seasonal, and annual cycle of activities of early farming communities remains relatively poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The volume of human carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope data produced in archaeological research has increased markedly in recent years. However, knowledge of bone remodelling, its impact on isotope variation, and the temporal resolution of isotope data remains poorly understood. Varied remodelling rates mean different elements (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Etruria contained one of the great early urban civilisations in the Italian peninsula during the first millennium BC, much studied from a cultural, humanities-based, perspective, but relatively little with scientific data, and rarely in combination. We have addressed the unusual location of twenty inhumations found in the sacred heart of the Etruscan city of Tarquinia, focusing on six of these as illustrative, contrasting with the typical contemporary cremations found in cemeteries on the edge of the city. The cultural evidence suggests that the six skeletons were also distinctive in their ritualization and memorialisation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Horse sacrifice and deposition are enigmatic features of funerary rituals identified across prehistoric Europe that persisted in the eastern Baltic. Genetic and isotopic analysis of horses in Balt cemeteries [1st to 13th centuries CE (Common Era)] dismantle prevailing narratives that locally procured stallions were exclusively selected. Strontium isotope analysis provides direct evidence for long-distance (~300 to 1500 kilometers) maritime transport of Fennoscandian horses to the eastern Baltic in the Late Viking Age (11th to 13th centuries CE).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Over the past 10,000 years, humans have actively influenced fallow deer populations, leading to various outcomes, including the endangered Persian fallow deer and the widespread European fallow deer, which holds unique statuses in different regions.
  • - Genetic and archaeological studies reveal that European fallow deer have two main genetic groups in Anatolia and the Balkans, which served as their primary glacial refuges, and demonstrate how humans translocated these deer across regions, often sourcing them from distant populations.
  • - The historical movement of fallow deer, influenced by myths and cultural practices, highlights the complexity between wild and domestic species, providing insights that could inform modern wildlife management strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The stable isotopes of sulfur provide a distinctive signature for marine proximity and interaction. Exploring coastal proximity has been the principal application of sulfur isotopes in archaeology and palaeoecology, but this deals only with high (greater than 14‰) isotope values, meaning little interpretation has been gained from lower values. Progress has been hindered by issues with biosphere mapping.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lead (Pb) isotopes provide a complementary method to other provenance tools for tracking the origin and movement of humans and animals. The method is founded in the geographic distribution of Pb isotope ratios. However, unlike the Sr isotope method that is closely linked to the lithology of underlying rocks, Pb more closely reflects the tectonic regimes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The great Tudor warship, the , which sank tragically in the Solent in 1545 AD, presents a rare archaeological opportunity to research individuals for whom the precise timing and nature of death are known. A long-standing question surrounds the composition of the Tudor navy and whether the crew were largely British or had more diverse origins. This study takes a multi-isotope approach, combining strontium (Sr/Sr), oxygen (δO), sulfur (δS), carbon (δC) and nitrogen (δN) isotope analysis of dental samples to reconstruct the childhood diet and origins of eight of the crew.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study explores the utility of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis of bone collagen for investigating prehistoric cooking. Approaches to cooking practices have relied principally on artefactual evidence, macroscopic bone modification, and organic residue analysis. However, direct evidence for cooking of bone has been limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Archaeology has yet to capitalise on the opportunities offered by bioarchaeological approaches to examine the impact of the 11th-century AD Norman Conquest of England. This study utilises an integrated multiproxy analytical approach to identify and explain changes and continuities in diet and foodways between the 10th and 13th centuries in the city of Oxford, UK. The integration of organic residue analysis of ceramics, carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope analysis of human and animal bones, incremental analysis of δ13C and δ15N from human tooth dentine and palaeopathological analysis of human skeletal remains has revealed a broad pattern of increasing intensification and marketisation across various areas of economic practice, with a much lesser and more short-term impact of the Conquest on everyday lifestyles than is suggested by documentary sources.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Navan Fort is an iconic prehistoric Irish ceremonial centre and the legendary capital of Ulster. The fort has produced an exceptional pig-dominated faunal assemblage that also contained a barbary macaque skull. Dating from the 4 to 1 century BC, it is likely to be a ceremonial feasting centre that may have drawn people and their animals from across Ulster and beyond.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The great henge complexes of southern Britain are iconic monuments of the third millennium BCE, representing great feats of engineering and labor mobilization that hosted feasting events on a previously unparalleled scale. The scale of movement and the catchments that the complexes served, however, have thus far eluded understanding. Presenting the largest five-isotope system archeological dataset (Sr/Sr, δS, δO, δC, and δN) yet fully published, we analyze 131 pigs, the prime feasting animals, from four Late Neolithic (approximately 2800 to 2400 BCE) complexes to explore the networks that the feasts served.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human Pb exposure comes from two sources: (i) natural uptake through ingestion of soils and typified by populations that predate mining activity and (ii) anthropogenic exposure caused by the exposure to Pb derived from ore deposits. Currently, the measured concentration of Pb within a sample is used to discriminate between these two exposure routes, with the upper limit for natural exposure in skeletal studies given as 0.5 or 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The aim of this study was to determine what changes occur in previously described tidal expiratory flow patterns when extrathoracic resistance is added.

Methodology: A total of 16 subjects with normal lung function and 15 patients with chronic COPD, were studied. The following measurements were made before and after the addition of an extrathoracic expiratory resistance (EER; 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Study Objectives: To explore the flow and time domain characteristics of resting tidal airflow profiles in the presence of obstructive airway disease.

Methods: Spirometry was performed on 81 adults and 46 juveniles in the lung function laboratory. All the juveniles had cystic fibrosis (CF), as did some of the adults (n = 25), with the remainder having either healthy lungs or COPD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Study Objective: To determine whether tidal expiratory airflow patterns change with increasing airways obstruction in patients with cystic fibrosis.

Design: An observational study.

Setting: Lung function laboratory.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Earlier studies have shown that time and flow indices derived from tidal expiratory flow patterns can be used to distinguish the severity of airway obstruction. This study was designed to address two aspects of tidal expiratory flow patterns: 1) how do expiratory flow patterns differ between subjects with normal and obstructed airways; and 2) can a sensitive index of airway obstruction be derived from these pattern differences? Tidal expiratory flow patterns from 66 adult subjects with varying degrees of airway obstructive disease with a forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) of 20-121% predicted were examined. In each subject, the expired flow pattern from each consecutive breath was scaled and then averaged together to create a single expired pattern.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An index obtained from tidal expiration, the ratio of time to peak tidal expiratory flow (tPTEF) to expiratory time (tE), discriminates between groups with and without airflow obstruction in infants and children and correlates with other measurements of airflow obstruction in adults. The aim of this study was to determine whether the diagnosis of airflow obstruction could be made from an analysis of the later part of the expiratory tidal flow time curve, i.e beyond the maximum flow.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: A study was performed to determine the elastic equilibrium volume (Vr) of the respiratory system in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Methods: Voluntary relaxed expiration from total lung capacity (TLC) was studied in three groups of subjects: seven patients with severe chronic airways obstruction (COPD), 10 normal subjects, and 15 subjects with restrictive disease.

Results: In the normal subjects and the patients with restrictive disease voluntary relaxed expiration from TLC stopped close to end tidal volume (FRC) and the volume expired in this manoeuvre was less than that expired in a slow vital capacity manoeuvre (SVC).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There are times in clinical practice when it would be useful to be able to assess the severity of airways obstruction from tidal breathing. Three indices of airways obstruction derived from analysis of resting tidal expiratory flow have previously been described: (1) Tme/TE = time to reach maximum expiratory flow/expiratory time; (2) Krs = decay constant of exponential fitted to tidal expiratory flow versus time curve; and (3) EV = extrapolated volume--that is, area under the curve when the fitted exponential is extrapolated to zero flow. In this paper a further index--dtr/TE, time from the beginning of expiration till the rapid decay of flow begins/expiratory time--is evaluated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: High calorie intakes, especially as carbohydrate, increase carbon dioxide production (VCO2) and may precipitate respiratory failure in patients with severe pulmonary disease. Energy obtained from fat results in less carbon dioxide and thus may permit a reduced level of alveolar ventilation for any given arterial blood carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2).

Methods: Ten patients with stable severe chronic obstructive lung disease underwent a six minute walk before and 45 minutes after taking 920 kcal of a fat rich drink, an isocalorific amount of a carbohydrate rich drink, and an equal volume of a non-calorific control liquid on three separate days, in a double blind randomised crossover study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The first pass uptake, metabolism and recovery of bupivacaine were examined in an intact rabbit lung model using a multiple indicator technique with rapid sequential sampling. The rabbits were allocated to an acidotic group (pH 7.0-7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A double indicator technique has been used in an in situ isolated perfused rabbit lung model to examine the first pass effect of the lung on systemic bupivacaine concentrations. Bupivacaine (0.5 mg/kg) was given in two consecutive boluses to six in situ isolated perfused New Zealand White rabbit lung preparations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

During quiet ventilation in 10 patients with severe chronic airflow obstruction (AFO) there were large tidal swings of pleural pressure, 15.8 +/- 5.1 cmH2O, with high negative pressures achieved, 15.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF